A SECOND VISIT THE UIITED STATES NORTH AMERICA, BY SIR CHAKLES IYELL, F.R.S., PRESIDENT OF THE GEOLOGICAL SOCIETY OK LONDON, AUTHOK OF "THE PHINCIPLES OF GEOLOGV," AND " TBAVELS IN NOKTH AMERICA." IN TWO VOLUMES. ^^"^ S'~f" VOL. I. NEW YORK: HARPER & BROTHERS, PUBLISHERS. LONDON: JOHN MURE AY. 1849. \ (O • CONTENTS OF THE FIRST VOLUME. CHAPTER I. PAGE Voyage from Liverpool to Halifax. — Gale. — Iceberg. — Drift Ice and Gulf Stream. — Coast of Newfoundland. — Engine room of Steamer. — Con versations on Coolies in the West Indies. — Halifax. — News of Judge Story's Death. — Boston. — Success of the Mail Steam Packets. — Cus tom House Officers 13 CHAPTER II. Boston. — Horticultural Show in Faneuil Hall. — Review of Militia. — Peace Association. — Excursion to the White Mountains. — Railway Traveling. — Portsmouth, New Hampshire. — Geology, Fossils in Drift. — Submarine forest. — Wild Plants : Asters, Solidagos, Poison Ivy. — Swallows. — Glacial Grooves. — Rocks transported by Antarctic Ice. — Body of a Whale discovered by an American Trader in an Iceberg . 27 CHAPTER III. Portland in Maine. — Kenriebec River. — Timber Trade. — Fossil Shells at Gardiner. — Augusta the Capital of Maine. — Legal Profession: Advo cates and Attorneys. — Equality of Sects. — Religious Toleration. — Cal- viuiscic Theology. — Day of Doom ....... 41 CONTENTS. CHAPTER IV. PAGE Journey from Portland to the White Mountains. — Plants — Churches, School-houses. — Temperance Hotel. — Intelligence of New-Englanders. — Climate, Consumption. — Conway. — Division of Property. — Every Man his own Tenant. — Autumnal Tints. — Bears hybernating. — Willey Slide. — Theory of Scratches and Grooves on Rocks. — Scenery. — Waterfalls and Ravines. — The Notch. — Forest Trees and Mountain Plants.— Fabyan's Hotel.— Echo 53 CHAPTER V. Ascent of Mount Washington. — Mr. Oakes. — Zones of distinct Vegeta tion. — Belt of Dwarf Firs. — Bald Region and Arctic Flora on Sum mit. — View from Summit. — Migration of Plants from Arctic Re gions. — Change of Climate since Glacial Period. — Granitic Rocks 0* White Mountains. — Franconia Notch. — Revival at Bethlehem. — Miller- ite Movement. — The Tabernacle at Boston. — Mormons. — Remarks on New England Fanaticism ......... 66 CHAPTER VI. Social Equality. — Position of Servants. — War with England. — Coalition of Northern Democrats, and Southern Slave-owners. — Ostracism of Wealth. — Legislators paid. — Envy in a Democracy. — Politics of the Country and the City. — Pledges at Elections. — Universal Suffrage. — Adventure in a Stage Coach. — Return from the White Mountains. — Plymouth in New Hampshire. — Congregational and Methodist Churches. — Theological Discussions of Fellow Travelers. — Temper ance Movement. — Post-Office Abuses. — Lowell Factories . . .80 CHAPTER VII. Plymouth, Massachusetts. — Plymouth Beach. — Marine Shells. — Quick sand. — Names of Pilgrim Fathers. — Forefathers' Day. — Pilgrim Rel ics. — Their Authenticity considered. — Decoy Pond. — A Barn Travel ing. — Excursion to Salem. — Museum. — Warrants for Execution of Witches. — Causes of the Persecution. — Convert iiou with Colored Abolitionists. — Comparative Capacity of White uud Negro Kaot-e. — Half-Breeds and Hybrid Intellects ....... 93 CONTENTS. CHAPTER VIII. PAGE Pretended Fossil Sea Serpent, or Zeuglodon, from Alabama. — Recent Appearance of a Sea Serpent in Gulf of St. Lawrence. — In Norway in 1845. — Near Cape Ann, Massachusetts, 1817. — American Descrip tions. — Conjectures as to Nature of the Animal. — Sea Snake stranded in the Orkneys proved to be a Shark. — Dr. Barclay's Memoir. — Sir Everard Home's Opinion. — Sea Serpent of Hebrides, 1808. — Reasons for concluding that Pontoppidan's Sea Snake was a Basking Shark. — Captain M'Quhae's Sea Serpent 107 CHAPTER IX. Boston. — No Private Lodgings. — Boarding-houses. — Hotels. — Effects of the Climate on Health. — Large Fortunes. — Style of Living. — Serv ants. — Carriages. — Education of Ladies. — Marriages. — Professional Incomes. — Protectionist Doctrines. — Peculiarities of Language. — Literary Tastes. — Cost of Living. — Alarms of Fire .... 122 CHAPTER X. Boston. — Blind Asylum and Laura Briclgeman. — Respect for Freedom of Conscience. — Cemetery of Mount Auburn. — Channing's Cenotaph. — Episcopal Churches. — Unitarian Congregations. — Eminent Preach ers. — Progress of Unitarians why slow. — Their works reprinted in England. — Nothingarians. — Episcopalian Asceticism. — Separation of Religion and Politics . . 133 CHAPTER XI. Boston. — Whig Caucus. — Speech of Mr. Webster. — Politics in Masachu- setts. — Election of Governor and Representatives. — Thanksgiving Day and Governor's Proclamation. — Absence of Pauperism. — Irish Repeal Meeting. — New England Sympathizer. — Visit to a Free School. — State Education. — Pay and Social Rank of Teachers — Importance of the Profession. — Rapid Progress and Effects of Educational Move ment. — Popular Lectures. — Lending Libraries . . . . .141 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XII. PAGE Boston, Popular Education, continued. — Patronage of Universities and Science. — Channing on Milton. — Milton's Scheme of teaching the Natural Sciences. — New England Free Schools. — Their Origin. — First Puritan Settlers not illiterate. — Sincerity of their Religious Faith. — Schools founded in Seventeenth Century in Massachusetts. — Discour aged in Virginia. — Sir W. Berkeley's Letter. — Pastor Robinson's Views of Progress in Religion. — Organization of Congregational Church es. — No Penalties for Dissent. — Provision made for future Variations in Creeds. — Mode of working exemplified. — Impossibility of conceal ing Truths relating to Religion from an educated Population. — Gain to the Higher Classes, especially the Clergy. — New Theological Col- . lege. — The Lower Orders not rendered indolent, discontented, or ir religious by Education. Peculiar Stimulus to Popular Instruction in the United States 155 CHAPTER XIII. Leaving Boston for the South. — Railway Stove. — Fall of Snow. — New- Haven, and Visit to Professor Silliman. — New York. — Improvements in the City. — Croton Waterworks. — Fountains. — Recent Conflagra tion. — New Churches. — Trinity Church. — News from Europe of Con verts to Rome. — Reaction against Tractarians. — Electric Telegraph, its Progres in America. — Morse and Wheatstone. — 11,000 Schools in New York for Secular instruction. — Absence of Smoke. — Irish Voters. — Nativism 178 CHAPTER XIV. New York to Philadelphia. — Scenery in New Jersey. — War about Ore gon. — Protectionist Theories. — Income Tax and Repudiation. — Re criminations against British Aggrandizement. — Irish Quarter and fraudulent Votes. — Washington. — Congress and Annexation of Texas. — General Cass for War. — Winthrop for Arbitration. — Inflated Elo quence. — Supreme Court. — Slavery in District of Columbia. — Museum, Collection of Corals. — Sculpture from Palenque. — Conversa tions with Mr. Fox. — A Residence at Washington not favorable to a just Estimate of the United States. — False Position of Foreign Diplo matists . 191 CONTENTS. CHAPTER XV. PAGE Washington to Richmond. — Legislature of Virginia in Session. — Substi tution of White for Slave Labor. — Progress of Negro Instruction ,~ -^-SJave-dealers. — Kindness to Negroes. — Coal of Oolitic Period near Richmond. — Visit to the Mines. — Upright Fossil Trees. — Deep Shafts, and "Thickness of Coal Seams. — Explosion of Gas. — Natural Coke. — Resemblance of the more modern Coal-measures to old Carboniferous Rocks. — Whites working with free Negroes in the Mines . . . 205 CHAPTER XVI. Journey through North Carolina. — Wilmington. — Recent Fire and Pass ports for Slaves. — Cape Fear River and Smithfield. — Spanish Moss, and Uses of. — Charleston. — Anti-Negro Feeling. — Passage from Mu- lattoes to Whites. — Law against importing free Blacks. — Dispute with Massachusetts. — Society in Charleston. — Governesses. — War-Panic. — Anti-English Feeling caused by Newspaper Press. — National Arbitra tion of the Americans. — Dr. Bachman's Zoology. — Geographical Representation of Species. — Rattle-Snakes. — Turkey Buzzards . .218 CHAPTER XVII. Charleston to Savannah. — Beaufort River, or Inland Navigation in South Carolina.— Slave Stealer.— Cockspur Island.— Rapid growth of Oysters. — Eagle caught by Oyster. — Excursion from Savannah to Skiddaway Island.— Megatherium and Mylodon. — Cabbage Palms, or tree Palmet tos. — Deceptive Appearance of Submarine Forest. — Alligators swal lowing Flints. — Their Tenacity of Life when decapitated. — Grove of Live Oaks.— Slaves taken to Free States 230 CHAPTER XVIII. Savannah to Darien. — Anti-Slavery Meetings discussed. — War with England. — Landing at Darien. — Crackers. — Scenery on Altamaha River. — Negro Boatmen singing. — Marsh Blackbird in Rice Grounds. — Hospitality of Southern Planters. — New Clearing and Natural Rotation of Trees. — Birds. — Shrike and Kingfisher. — Excursion to St. Simon's Island. — Butler's Island and Negroes. — Stumps of Trees in Salt CONTENTS. PAGH Marshes proving Subsidence of Land. — Alligator seen. — Their Nests and Habits. — Their Fear of Porpoises. — Indian Shell Mound on St. Simon's Island. — Date-palm, Orange, Lemon, and Olive Trees. — Hur ricanes. — Visit to outermost Barrier Island. — Sea Shells on Beach. — Negro Maid-Servants 240 CHAPTER XIX. Rivers made turbid by the Clearing of Forests. — Land rising in successive Terraces. — Origin of these. — Bones of extinct Quadrupeds in Lower Terrace. — Associated Marine Shells. — Digging of Brunswick Canal. — Extinction of Megatherium and its Contempories. — Dying out of rare Species — Gordonia Pubescens. — Life of Southern Planters. — Negroes on a Rice Plantation. — Black Children. — Separate Negro Houses.-^ Work exacted. — Hospital for Negroes. — Food and Dress. — Black/ Driver. — Prevention of Crimes. — African Tom. — Progress of Negroes j in Civilization. — Conversions to Christianity. — Episcopalian, Baptist, and Methodist Missionaries. — Amalgamation and Mixture of Races . 256 Library, j A SECOND VISIT TO THE UNITED STATES, CHAPTER I. Voyage from Liverpool to Halifax. — Gale. — Iceberg. — Drift Ice and Gulf Stream. — Coast of Newfoundland. — Engine-room of Steamer. — Conver sations on Coolies in the West Indies. — Halifax. — News of Judge Story's Death. — Boston. — Success of the Mail Steam Packets. — Custom House Officers. Sept. 4. 1845. — EMBARKED with my wife at Liverpool, in the Britannia, one of the Cunard line of steam-ships, bound for Halifax and Boston. On leaving the wharf, we had first been crammed, with a crowd of passengers and heaps of luggage, into a diminutive steamer, which looked like a toy by the side of the larger ship, of 1200 tons, in which we were to cross the ocean. I was reminded, however, by a friend, that this small craft was more than three times as large as one of the open caravels of Columbus, in his first voyage, which was only 1 5 tons burden, and without a deck. It is, indeed, marvelous to reflect on the daring of the early adventurers; for Frobisher, in 1576, mado his way from the Thames to the shores of Labrador with two small barks of 20 and 25 tons each, not much surpassing in size the barge of a man-of-war ; and Sir Humphry Gilbert crossed to Newfoundland, in 1583, in a bark of 10 tons only, which was lost in a tempest on the return voyage. 14 GALE. [CHAP. I. The morning after we set sail we found ourselves off Cork, in the midst of the experimental squadron of steamers and ships of the line, commanded by Sir Hyde Parker. They had been out several weeks performing their nautical evolutions, and we had the amusement of passing close to the largest ships of the fleet — the St. Vincent and the Superb. Our captain fired a salute as we went under the batteries of the last of these — the Admiral's ship. After sailing at the rate of more than 200 miles a day for four days, our progress was retarded, Sept. 8, by an equinoctial gale, which came in from the southwest, and. blowing for twelve hours, raised such a sea, that we only made four miles an hour. Another gale of still greater violence came on six days after ward, on the night of the 14th, when the ship was running at the rate of ten and a half miles an hour, along the eastern edge of the Great Baifk. The wind had been N.E., when suddenly, and in an instant, it blew from the N.W. I was in my berth below when this squall struck the vessel, and supposed that we had run upon some floating timber or an iceberg. We felt the ship heel as if falling over. On inquiry next day of the captain, and the only passenger who was on deck at the time of this con cussion, I learnt that they saw a cloud of white foam advancing toward them on the surface of the sea from the N.W., like a line of surf on a beach. The captain had time to get the sails hauled half up, all except the top-sail, which was torn to pieces, when the advancing line of foam reached the ship, at which moment there was some vivid lightning, which the passenger thought was the cause of the blow resembling the stroke of a solid body against the steamer. When the wind first filled the sails in an opposite direction, it seemed as if the masts must give way. All hands had been called on deck, and the men went into the rigging to furl the sails with the utmost order and cool ness. In a few minutes the wind had veered rapidly round the compass, from N.W. to N.E., and then went on to blow from this, the old quarter again, a perfect hurricane for twenty-three hours ; the spray being carried mast high, so that there was a complete mingling of sea and sky. We could never tell whether CHAP. I.] POKPOISES. 15 the cloud which enveloped us consisted chiefly of the foam "blown off the crests of the waves, or of the driving mist and rain which were falling during the greater part of the day. Among our passengers were some experienced American sea- eaptains, who had commanded vessels of their own round Cape Horn, and, being now for the first time in a steamer at sea, were watching with professional interest the Britannia's behavior in the storm. They came to the conclusion, that one of these vessels, well appointed, with a full crew, skilled officers, and good en gineers, was safer than any sailing packet ; being light in their rigging, and having small sails, they run no danger of having their masts carried away in a stiff breeze, and the power of steam enables them always to make way, so as to steer and keep their head to the wind, on which safety depends. It sometimes hap pens, when a wave strikes a sailing vessel in a squall, that before she has time to work round and get her head to windward, an other wave breaks over and swamps her, and to such an accident the loss of several packets between the United States and Liver pool is attributed. I observed that there was no lightning conductor in our ship ; and it seems to be the prevailing belief that steam-boats are less liable than other vessels to suffer from lightning, although the steamers in the royal navy are fitted with copper-wire rope con ductors. My chief amusement, when the weather was moderate, was to watch the porpoises (Delphinus phoccena) gamboling, rolling, and tumbling in the water, and yet keeping up with our ship when she was running eleven miles an hour. They were very numerous, usually following each other in a line at short intervals, each individual about four or five feet long, their backs of a blue- ish-black color, swimming without effort, and seeming scarcely to move either their fins or tail. Occasionally they dive, and then re-appear to take breath at a great distance, often leaping up out of the water, so as to display their silvery white bodies. The only other living creatures which attracted our attention, when still far from land, were enormous flights of sea-birds, which filled the air, or were seen swimming on the ocean near the shoal called 16 ICEBERG. [CHAP. I. the Flemish Cap, lat. 47° 35' N. ; long. 44° 3.2' W. They feed on fish peculiar to these comparatively shallow parts of the Atlantic. But the event of chief interest to me on this voyage AV.-IS be holding, for the first time in my life, a large iceberg. . It came in sight on the 13th Sept., a season when they are rarely met with here. We were nearing the Great Bank, which was about eight miles distant, the air foggy, so that I could only see it dimly through the telescope, although it was as white as snow, and supposed by the officers to be about 200 feet high. The foggy and chilly state of the atmosphere had led the captain to suspect the proximity of floating ice, and half-hourly observations had been made on the temperature of the sea, but the water was always at 49° F., as is usual in this month. We were then in lat. 47° 37' N., long. 45° 39' W., our latitude corresponding to that of the Loire in France. To a geologist, accustomed to seek for the explanation of vari ous phenomena in the British Isles and Northern Europe, espe cially the transportation of huge stones to great distances, and the polishing and grooving of the surfaces of solid rocks, by referring to the agency of icebergs at remote periods, when much of what is now land in the northern hemisphere was still submerged, it is no small gratification to see, for the first time, one of these icy masses floating so far to the southward. I learnt from our cap tain that last year, June 1844, he fell in with an iceberg aground at some distance from the land ofT Cape Race, on the S.E. point of Newfoundland, in lat. 4G° 40' N. It was of a square shape, 100 feet high, and had stranded in a sea of some depth ; for its sides were steep, and soundings of fifty fathoms were obtained close to the ice. It was seen at the same spot ten days after ward by a brig. A military officer on board also tells me that last year, when he was in garrison in Newfoundland, an iceberg continued aground in the harbor of St. John's for a year, and they used to fire cannon-balls at it from the battery. There are, indeed, innumerable well-authenticated cases of these islands of floating ice having stranded on the* great oceanic shoals S.E. of Newfoundland, even in places where the water is no less than CHAP. I.] DRIFTING OF ICEBERGS. 17 100 fathoms deep, the average depth over the Great Bank being from forty to fifty fathoms. That they should be arrested in. their course is not; surprising, when we consider that the mass of floating ice below water is eight times greater than that above ; and Sir James Ross saw icebergs which had rur. aground in Baffin's Bay, in water 1500 feet deep. If we reflect on the weight of these enormous masses, and the momentum which they accjuire when impelled by winds and currents, and when they are moving at the rate of several miles an hour, it seems difficult to over-estimate the disturbance which they must create on a soft bottom of mud or loose sand, or the grinding power they must exert when they grate along a shelf of solid rock overspread with a layer of sand. Mr. Redfield of New York has lately published * a chart show ing the positions of the icebergs observed in the North Atlantic daring the last fifteen years, and it will be remarked, that they have been met with at various points between the 47th and 36th parallels of latitude,' the most southern being that which Captain Couthuoy encountered, lat. 36° 10' N., long. 39° W., a mile long and 100 feet high. This berg w^as on the extreme southern boundary of the gulf stream, which it had crossed against the direction of the superficial current, so as to get as far south as the latitude of the Straits of Gibraltar. In fact, these great ice- islands coming from the Greenland seas are not stopped by the gulf-stream, which is a mere superficial current of warmer water flowing in an opposite direction, but are borne along from N.E. to S.W. by the force of the arctic under-current, consisting of colder water, into which the icebergs descend to a great depth. All the circumstances connected with the geographical outline of the coast, the shape of the sea-bottom, the oceanic currents, and the prevailing winds, although liable to be modified and greatly altered in the course of time, may continue nearly the same for the next ten thousand or twenty thousand years ; and in that period thousands of bergs, occasionally charged with frag ments of rock, and many of them running aground in a variety of places, will be conveyed in every century over certain tracts * Amer. Journ. Science, vol. xlviii. 1844, 18 COAST OF NEWFOUNDLAND. [CHAP. I. of the Atlantic, and in given directions. The natural course of oceanic currents transporting ice from polar regions is from N.E. to S.W. ; the westerly inclination being due to the influence of the increased velocity of the diurnal rotation of the earth's sur face as we proceed southward. Now it is a well-known fact, and one of great geological interest, which I had an opportunity of verifying myself in 1842,^ that in Canada the polished surfaces of hard rocks exhibit those strise and straight parallel grooves (such as are generally ascribed to glacial action) in a N.E. and S.W. direction, and the blocks called erratic have also traveled from N.E. to S.W. Their course, therefore, agrees, as Mr. Redfield has pointed out, with the normal direction of polar cur rents charged with ice, where no disturbing causes have inter vened. In order to account for the phenomenon, we have to sup pose that Canada was submerged at the time when the rocks were polished and striated by the grating of the ice on the ancient sea-bottom ; and that this was actually the case, is proved by in dependent evidence, namely, the occurrence of marine shells of recent species at various heights above the level of the sea in the region drained by the St. Lawrence. f Professor Hitchcock has shown that, in Massachusetts, there is another system of striai and grooves running from N.N.E. to S.S.W. ; the bould ers and transported blocks of the same region having taken a cor responding course, doubtless, in consequence of the floating ice bergs having, in that case, been made by winds or currents, or the shape of the land and sea-bottom, to deviate from the normal direction. Many of the icebergs annually drifted into southern latitudes in the Atlantic, are covered with seals, which are thus brought into very uncongenial climates, and probably are never able to make their way back again. They are often seen playing about the rocks on the shores of Massachusetts in summer, so that they seem able, for a time at least, to accommodate themselves to con siderable heat. Early on the morning of the 1 5th of September, the captain * Sec "Lyoll's Travels in North America,'' vol. ii, p. 135. t Ibid. vol. h. p, 143. CHAP. I.] ENGINE-ROOM OF A STEAMER. 19 got sight of land, consisting of the hills near St. John's, New foundland, about forty miles distant. When we came on deck, we were running rapidly in smooth water along the shore, within four miles of Trespassey Bay. The atmosphere was bright, and we had a clear view of the rocky coast, which reminded me of some of the most sterile, cold, and treeless parts of Scotland. Not even a shrub appeared to vary the uniform covering of green turf; yet we were in a latitude corresponding to the South of France. In a large steam-ship like the Britannia, there are three very distinct societies, whose employments during the voyage are sin gularly contrasted. There are the sailors, all of whom were fully occupied under their officers, for a time at least, during the gale, furling the sails and attending to the ordinary duties of a sailing ship. Then there is the saloon, where gentlemen and well-dressed ladies are seen lounging and reading books, or talk ing, or playing backgammon, and enjoying, except during a hur ricane, the luxuries arid expensive fare of a large hotel. Tn another spacious room, which I had the curiosity to visit after the storm, is a large corps of enginemen and firemen, with sooty faces and soiled clothes, pale with heat, heaping up coals on the great furnaces, or regulating the machinery. On visiting the large engine-room, we were filled with admiration at seeing the complicated apparatus, and the ease with which it moved, having never once stopped for a minute when traversing 3000 miles of ocean, although the vessel had been .pitching and rolling, and sometimes quivering, as she was forced by the power of the steam against the opposing waves, and although the ship had sometimes heeled at a very high angle, especially when struck suddenly by the squall of the 14th. The engine is so placed near the center of the ship, that during a storm the piston is never inclined at a higher angle than twelve degrees, which does not derange the freedom of its motion. The Britannia, a ship of 1200 tons, has four large boilers ; the engines having a 44-0 horse power. When she left Liverpool she had 550 tons of cuals in her, and burned from thirty to forty tons a day, her speed augmenting sensibly toward the end of the voyage, as she grew lighter ; 20 REVOLUTIONS OF ENGINE. [CHA.P. I. but, on the other hand, the vibration caused by the machinery increasing also, much to the discomfort of the passengers. Among the wonders of the engine-room, no object made so lively an impression on my mind as a small dial, called the Indicator, where a hand, like that of a clock, moving round in a circle, registers the number of revolutions made by the wheels of the engine during the whole voyage ; this hand or index being attached to one of the moving shafts, and made to advance slightly by every stroke. We were going at the time at the rate of ten and a half miles an hour, and the paddle-wheels were revolving fifteen and a half times a minute ; but during the gale they had only made six or seven revolutions, the engineer, to avoid too great a strain on the machinery, having then burned much less coal, and going no more than half speed. Our short est day's sail, during the whole voyage, was 114 miles. I observed, on our arrival at Boston, that the number of revolu tions registered by the Indicator was 275,122, the ship having run 2946 miles in fourteen days and twenty-two hours ; the distance from Liverpool to Halifax being 2550 miles, and from thence to Boston 396. For the sake of comparing this result with former voyages of the Britannia, I made the following extract from the Log Book of the chief engineer : — Number of Length of Revolutions Voyage. of the Engines. Days. Hours. Outward Voyage, May. 1845 .... 273,328 .... 14 12 Homeward do. June, " .... 253,073 .... 11 8 Outward do. July, " .... 282,409 .... 18 13 Homeward do. August, " .... 292,122 .... 14 2 It is remarkable how nearly the number of strokes made by the engine in our present voyage agrees with those recorded in the voyage of last May, which it will be seen was of the sarn,e length, with the exception of a few hours, the longer voyage exhibiting a slight excess in the number of revolutions. In all the four trips, the difference between the highest and lowest numbers, amounts to no more than a seventh or eighth of the whole. It is like the regular pulsation of the heart, beating a given number of times in a minute ; the pulse quickening during CHAP. I.] COOLIES IN THE WEST INDIES. 21 excitement and more rapid motion, and being slower when in comparative rest, yet on the whole preserving a remarkable uniformity of action. Nor can any one in full health and vigor be more unconscious of the rapid contractions and dilatations of the heart, than are nearly all the inmates of the steam-ship of the complicated works and movements of the machinery, on the accuracy of which their progress and safety depends. In the course of the last twelve months, the steamers on this line have sometimes taken as much as seventeen, and even twenty-one days, to make their passage against head winds by Halifax, to Boston ; but the comparative advantage of steam power is never more evident than at the period of the most tedious voyages, the liners having required seventy days or more to cross in corresponding seasons. During the passage we had some animated discussions in the saloon on the grand experiment now making by the British government, of importing Coolies, or Hindoo emigrants, from the Deccan into the West Indies, to make up for the deiiciency of Negro labor consequent on the emancipation of the slaves. We had on board a Liverpool merchant, who had a large contract for conveying these Coolies across the ocean, and who told us that more than forty ships would be employed this year (1845) in carrying each 300 Hindoo laborers to Jamaica, at the cost of £lG per head, and that he should sell the casks, which con tained the water for their drink, for the sugar trade in the West Indies. The New Englanders on board wished to know how far this proceeding differed from a new slave trade. It was explained to them that the emigrants were starving in their own country ; that the act was a voluntary one on their part ; and that, after a short term of years, the government was bound to give them a free passage back to their native country. Of this privilege many, after saving a sum of money, had actually availed themselves. It was also alleged that they made good agricultural laborers in a tropical climate. The Americans replied, that to introduce into any colony two distinct races, having different languages and religions, such as Negroes and Hindoos, is a curse of the greatest magnitude, and of the most 22 COOLIES IN THE WEST INDIES. [CHAP. I. lasting kind, as experience had proved throughout the American continent. A Barbadoes planter, who was present, declared his opinion that in his island the emancipation of the negroes had been suc cessful ; the population, about 120,000, being dense, arid a large proportion of them having white blood in their veins, with many of the wants of civilized men, and a strong wish to educate their children. The Americans, however, drew from him the admis sion, that in proportion as the colored people were rising in so ciety, the whites, whose aristocratic feelings and tastes were wounded by the increased importance of the inferior race, were leaving Barbadoes, the richest of them retreating to England, and the poor seeking their fortunes in the United States. It was also conceded, that in the larger islands, such as Jamaica, which the Americans compared to their Southern States, the negroes have retreated to unoccupied lands and squatted, and could not be induced to labor, and were therefore retrograding in civiliza tion ; so that the experience of more than ten years would be required before the Americans could feel warranted in imitating the example of England, even if they had the means of indemni fying the southern planters. We landed at Halifax on the 17th of September, and spent some hours there very agreeably, much refreshed by a walk on terra firma, and glad to call on some friends in the town. I was surprised to find that some of our fellow passengers, bound for Montreal, intended to go on with us to Boston, instead of stopping here ; so great are the facilities now enjoyed of traveling from New England to Canada, passing via Boston by railway to Albany, and thence by steam-boats through Lakes George and Champlain to Montreal. The chief subject of conversation, during the remaining two days of our voyage, was the death of Judge Story, the eminent jurist, whose works and decisions have been often cited as of high authority by English judges. The news of this unexpected event reached us at Halifax, and was evidently a matter of deep con cern to his fellow citizens, by whom he had been much loved and admired. After retiring from the bench of the Supreme Court CHAP. I.] JUDGE STORY. 03 at Washington, Story had been placed at the head of the Law School in Harvard University, which he had soon raised to celeb rity from small beginnings, drawing students to his lectures from every state of the Union. I afterward read, in the newspapers of Boston, several funeral orations pronounced in his honor, some from the pulpit, by preach ers of his own denomination (he was president of the Unitarian Association), which praised him for his pure, scriptural, and lib eral Christianity, and represented him as an earnest defender of the faith, one who had given to its evidences that accurate inves tigation which his reflecting mind and professional habits demand ed. "What he found to be true, he was never ashamed or afraid to declare. He valued the Gospel and felt his own need of its restraining and consoling power, alike in temptation and grief," &c. But eloquent eulogies were not wanting from ministers of some of the other churches, usually called in New England, by way of distinction from the Unitarian, " orthodox," some of which displayed at once the intensity and liberality of sectarian feeling in this country. They did homage to his talents and the upright ness of his conduct, and they dealt with his theological opinions in the spirit of Dry den's beautiful lines : — " The soul of Arcite went where heathens go, Who better live than we, though less they know." I will extract, from one of the most favorable of these effusions, the following passage : — " Judge Story was a Christian who professed a firm belief in the Bible as a revelation from God. He was a Unitarian ; but if he reposed in the divine mercy through the mediation of Christ, and if he came with the temper of a child to the Scrip tures, I have no doubt he has been received of Him to whom, in his last words, he committed himself in prayer ; and, had he been more orthodox in his creed without the Christian spirit and the Christian life, his orthodoxy would not have saved him." Sept. i9. — Early in the morning of the fifteenth day from our leaving Liverpool, we came in sight of the lighthouse of Cape 24 SEVERE FROST AT BOSTON. [CHAP. I. Anne, and a small and gayly painted green schooner, in full sail, and scudding rapidly through the water, brought us a pilot. In a few hours the long line of coast became more and more distinct, till Salem, Nahant, Lynn, the harbor of Boston and its islands, and at last the dome -of the State House, crowning the highest eminence, came full into view. To us the most novel feature in the architectural aspect of the city, was the Bunker Hill Monu ment, which had been erected since 1842 ; the form of which, as it resembles an Egyptian obelisk, and possibly because I had seen that form imitated in some of our tall factory chimneys, gave me no pleasure. After the cloudy and stormy weather we had encountered in the Atlantic, and the ice and fogs seen near the great banks, we were delighted with the clear atmosphere and bright sunshine of Boston, and heard with surprise of the intense heat of the sum mer, of which many persons had lately died, especially in New York. The extremes, indeed, of heat and cold in this country, are truly remarkable. Looking into the windows of a print shop, I saw an engraving of our good ship, the Britannia, which we had just quitted, represented as in the act of forcing her way through the ice of Boston harbor in the winter of 1844 — a truly arctic scene. A fellow passenger, a merchant from New York, where they are jealous of the monopoly hitherto enjoyed by their New England rival, of a direct and regular stearn communica tion with Europe, remarked to me that if the people of Boston had been wise, they would never have encouraged the publication of this print, as it was a clear proof that the British government should rather have selected New York, where the sea never freezes, as the fittest port for the mail packets. I had heard much during the voyage of this strange adventure of the Britan nia in the ice. Last winter it appears there had been a frost of unusual intensity, such as had not been known for more than half a century, which caused the sea to be frozen over in the harbor of Boston, although the water is as salt there as in mid-ocean. Moreover, the tide runs there at the rate of four or five miles an hour, rising twelve feet, and causing the whole body of the ice to be uplifted arid let down again to that amount twice every twen- CHAP. I.] SEVERE FROST AT BOSTON. 25 ty-four hours. Notwithstanding this movement, the surface re mained even and unbroken, except along the shore, where it cracked. Had the continuance of this frost been anticipated, it would have been easy to keep open a passage ; but on the 1st of Feb ruary, when the Britannia was appointed to sail, it was found that the ice was seven feet thick in the wharf, and two feet thick for a distance of seven miles out ; so that wagons and carts were conveying cotton and other freights from the shore to the edge of the ice, where ships were taking in their cargoes. No sooner was it understood that the mail was imprisoned, than the public spirit of the whole city was roused, and a large sum of money instantly subscribed for cutting a canal, seven miles long and 100 feet wide, through the ice. They began the operation by making two straight furrows, seven inches deep, with an ice plough drawn by horses, and then sawed the ice into square sheets, each 100 feet in diameter. When these were detached, they were made to slide, by. means of iron hooks and ropes fixed to them, under the great body of the ice, one edge being first depressed, and the ropes being pulled by a team of horses, and occasionally by a body of fifty men. On the 3d of February, only two days after her time, the steamer sailed out, breaking through a newly-formed sheet of ice, two inches thick, her bows being fortified with iron to protect her copper sheeting. She burst through the ice at the rate of seven miles an hour without much damage to her paddles ; but before she was in clear water, all her guard of iron had been torn off. An eye-witness of the scene told me that tents had been pitched on the ice, then cov ered by a slight fall of snow, and a concourse of people followed and cheered for the first mile, some in sleighs, others in sailing Doats fitted up with long blades of iron, like skates, by means of which they are urged rapidly along by their sails, not only before the wind, but even with a side wind, tacking and beating to windward as if they were in the water. The Britannia, released from her bonds, reached Liverpool in Ifteen days, so that no alarm had been occasioned by the delay; ,nd when the British Post-Office department offered to defray VOL. i. — B 26 CUSTOM-HOUSE OFFICERS. [CHAP. 1. the expense of the ice-channel, the citizens of Boston declined to be reimbursed. We were not detained more than an hour in the Custom house, although the number of our packages was great. In that hour the newspapers which had come out with us had been soj rapidly distributed, that our carriage was assailed in the streets by a host of vociferous boys, calling out, " Fifteen days later from Europe" — " The Times and Punch just received by the Britannia." In the course of my travels in the United States I heard American politicians complaining of the frequent change of officials, high and low, as often as a new party comes into power. In spite of this practice, however, the Custom-house officers, greatly to the comfort of the public, belong to a higher grade of society than those at Liverpool and our principal ports. I asked a New England friend, who was well acquainted with the " Old Country," whether the subordinates here are more highly paid ? " By no means," he replied. " The difference, then," said I, " must be owing to the better education given to all in your public schools?" "Perhaps, in some degree," he rejoined ; " but far more to the peculiarity of our institutions. Hecent examples are not wanting of men who have passed in a few years from the chief place in one of our great Custom-houses to a seat in the Cabinet or an appointment as embassador to a first-rate European power ; but, what is far more to the point, men who are unsuccessful at the bar or the church, often accept inferior stations in the Custom-house and other public offices without loss of social position." This explanation led me to reflect how much the British public might gain if a multitude of the smaller places in the public service at home, now slighted by aristocratic prejudices as ungenteel, were filled by those gentle men who, after being highly educated at Eton and other public schools, lead now a pastoral life in Australia, or spend their best days in exile far from their kindred and native land, as soldiers or sailors, wilhin the tropics. CHAPTER II. Boston. — Horticultural Show in Faneuil Hall. — Review of Militia. — Peace Association. — Excursion to the White Mountains. — Railway Traveling. — Portsmouth, New Hampshire. — Geology, Fossils in Drift. — Submarine Forest. — Wild Plants ; Asters, Solidagos, Poison Ivy. — Swallows. — Glacial Grooves. — Rocfcs transported by Antarctic Ice. — Body of a Whale discovered by an American Trader in an Iceberg. GREAT progress has been made in beautifying the city of Boston by new public buildings in the three years since we were last here. Several of these are constructed of granite, in a hand some style of architecture. The site of the town is almost an island, which has been united to the main land by long mounds, which are beginning to radiate in all directions, except the east, like the spokes of a wheel. Railway trains are seen continually flying to and fro along these narrow causeways at all hours of the day. On the evening of our arrival we went to a horticultural show of fruit and flowers in Faneuil Hall, where we found a large assembly of both sexes enjoying a " temperance feast," a band of music in the gallery, and the table spread with cakes, fruit, ices, tea, milk, and whey. I was glad to observe, what I am told, howrever, is an innovation here, that the ladies, instead of merely looking on from a gallery to see the gentlemen eat, were sitting at table in the body of the hall, and listening to some of the first orators of the land, Daniel Webster, R. C. Winthrop, and our friend and late fellow-voyager in the Britannia, Edward Everett, whose reception, on his return from his embassy to England, was most enthusiastic. He said, " he had been so lately rocking on the Atlantic, whose lullaby was not always of the gentlest, that he was hardly fit for a rocking in < the old cradle of Liberty ;' and felt almost unconsciously inclined to catch at the table to steady himself, expecting to see the flowers and the fruit fetch away in some lee-lurch. Even the pillars of old Faneuil Hal!, 28 REVIEW OF MILITIA. [CHAP. II. which are not often found out of the true plumb-line, seemed to reel over his head." Allusion was here made to this Hall having been the place of large popular meetings before 1775, where American patriotism was first roused to make a stand against the claims of the mother- country to impose taxes without consent of the provincial legis lature. In later days, the building being under the control of the city authorities, and the Whigs being usually in the ascendant here, the moderate party have almost always obtained possession of the Hall. Sept. 23. — From the windows of a friend's house, opening on the Common, we have a full view of what is called the " Fall Parade," or autumnal review of the Boston militia, cavalry and infantry, which has lasted all day, ending with a sham fight and much firing of cannon. Not that there is any excess of military fervor in this State, as in some others at the present moment ; on the contrary, a numerous and increasing Peace Association is distributing, gratis, many thousand copies of a, recent Fourth-of- July oration against war and military establishments, delivered by Mr. Charles Sumner. I was asked by a young friend here, in full uniform, whether I did not think " Independence-day" (an anniversary when all who have a regimental costume are accus tomed to wear it), a most inappropriate time for such an effusion, in which non-resistance principles bordering on Quakerism had been avowed; the orator asking, among other questions, "What is the use of the militia of the United States ?" and going as far as Channing in pronouncing war to be unchristian. I remembered having once admired the present Bishop of St. Asaph for choosing a certain day, set apart by the English Church for commemorating the " conspiracy, malicious practices, and Popish tyranny of the Romanists," for preaching a sermon on religious toleration ; and I therefore felt some hesitation in condemning the opportunity seized upon by an enthusiast of the peace party for propagating his views. " There is a soul of goodness in things evil Would men observingly distill it out." So long as the War of Independence lasted, I can understand CHAP. II.] PEACE ASSOCIATION. 29 the policy of annually reading out to the assembled multitude the celebrated " Declaration," setting forth the injuries inflicted by Great Britain, her usurpations previous to the year 1776, "her design to reduce the Americans to a state of absolute dependence by quartering armed troops upon the people — refusing to make the judges independent of the crown — imposing taxes without consent of the colonies — depriving them of trial by jury — some times suspending their legislatures — waging war against the colonies, arid transporting to their shores large armies of foreign mercenaries to complete the work of death, desolation, and tyranny already begun, with circumstances of cruelty and perfidy scarcely paralleled in the most barbarous ages — exciting domestic insurrections — bringing on the inhabitants of the frontiers the merciless Indian savages, whose known rule of warfare is the destruction of all ages, sexes, and conditions," &c., &c. All this recital may have been expedient when the great struggle for liberty and national existence was still pending ; but what effect can it have now, but to keep alive bad feelings, and perpetuate the memory of what should nearly be forgotten ? In many of the newer States the majority of the entire population have either themselves come out from the British Isles as new settlers, or are the children or grandchildren of men who emi grated since the " Declaration" was drawn up. If, therefore, they pour out in schools, or at Fourth-of-July meetings, declama tory and warlike speeches against the English oppressors of America, their words are uttered by parricidal lips, for they are the hereditary representatives, not of the aggrieved party, but of the aggressors. To many the Peace Associations appear to aim at objects as Utopian and hopeless as did the Temperance Societies to the generation which is now passing away. The cessation of war seems as unattainable as did the total abstinence from intoxicating liquors. But we have seen a great moral reform brought about, in many populous districts, mainly by combined efforts of well- organized societies to discourage intemperance, and we may hope that the hostilities of civilized nations may be mitigated at least by similar exertions. " Iri the harbor of Boston," says Mr. 30 ENVIRONS OF BOSTON. [CHAP. II. Sumner, " the Ohio, a ship of the line, of ninety guns, is now swinging idly at her moorings. She costs as much annually to maintain her in service, in salaries, wages, and provisions, as four Harvard Universities." He might have gone on to calculate how many primary schools might be maintained by the disband ing of single regiments, or the paying off of single ships, of those vast standing armies and navies now kept up in so many coun tries in Europe. How much ignorance, bigotry, and savage barbarism in the lower classes might be prevented by employing in education a small part of the revenues required to maintain this state of armed peace ! Sept. 22. — At this season the wealthier inhabitants of Boston are absent at watering-places in the hills, where there are mine ral springs, or at the sea-side. Some of them in their country villas, where we visited several friends in the neighborhood. The environs of Boston are very agreeable ; woods and hills, and bare rocks, and small lakes, and estuaries running far into the land, and lanes with hedges, and abundance of wild flowers. The extreme heat of summer does not allow of the green meadows and verdant lawns of England, but there are some well-kept gardens here — a costly luxury where the wages of labor are so high. Sept. 24. — I had determined before the autumn was over to make an excursion to the White Mountains of New Hampshire, which, with the exception of those in part of the Alleghany range in North Carolina, are the loftiest east of the Mississippi. Accordingly, I set off with my wife on the railway for Ports mouth, fifty-four miles north of Boston, which we reached in two hours and three quarters, having stopped at several intervening places, and going usually at the rate of twenty miles an hour. There were about eighty passengers in the train, forty of whom were in the same carriage as ourselves. " The car," in shape like a long omnibus, has a passage down the middle, sometimes called " the aisle," on the back part of which the seats are ranged transversely to the length of the apartment, which is high enough to allow a tall man to walk in it with his Jiat on. Each seat holds two persons, and is well-cushioned and furnished with a CHAP. II.] RAILWAY TRAVELING. 31 wooden back ingeniously contrived, so as to turn and permit the traveler to face either way, as he may choose to converse with any acquaintance who may be sitting- before or behind him. The long row of windows on each side affords a good view of the country, of which more is thus seen than on our English railroads. The trains, moreover, pass frequently through the streets of villages and towns, many of which have sprung up since the construction of the railway. The conductor passes freely through the passage in the center, and from one car to another, examining tickets and receiving payment, so as to pre vent any delay at the stations. If we desire to form an estimate of the relative accommoda tion, advantages, comforts, and cost of the journey in one of these railways as compared with those of England, we must begin by supposing all our first, second, and third-class passengers thrown into one set of carriages, and we shall then be astonished at the ease and style with which the millions travel in the United States. The charge for the distance of fifty-four miles, from Boston to Portsmouth, was 1^ dollar each, or 6s. 4:d. English, which was just half \vhat we had paid three weeks before for first-class places on our journey from London to Liverpool (21. 10s. for 210 miles), the speed being in both cases the same. Here there is the want of privacy enjoyed in an English first- class carriage, and the seats, though excellent, are less luxurious. On the other hand, the power of standing upright when tired of the sitting posture is not to be despised, especially on a long journey, and the open view right and left from a whole line of windows is no small gain. But when we come to the British second and third-class vehicles, cushionless, dark, and if it happen to rain, sometimes closed up with wooden shutters, and contrast them with the cars of Massachusetts, and still more the average appearance, dress, and manners of the inmates, the wide differ ence is indeed remarkable; at the same time, the price which the humblest class here can afford to pay proves how much higher must be the standard of wages than with us. On starting, we had first to cross the harbor of Boston in a large ferry-boat, where, to economize time, there is a bar- with 32 PORTSMOUTH, NEW HAMPSHIRE. [CHAP. II, refreshments, so that you may breakfast ; or, if you please, buy newspapers, or pamphlets, or novels. We then flew over rails, supported on long lines of wooden piles, following the coast, and having often the sea on one side, and fresh-water lakes, several miles long, or salt marshes, on the other. In some of the marshes we saw large haycocks on piles, waiting till the winter, when, the mud and water being firmly frozen, the crop can be carried in. We were soon at Lynn, a village of shoemakers, exporting shoes to distant parts of the Union ; and next went through the center of the town of Salem, partly in a tunnel in the main street ; then proceeded to Ipswich, leaving on our left Wenham Lake, and seeing from the road the wooden houses in which great stores of ice are preserved. In some of the low grounds I saw peat cut, and laid out to dry for fuel. We crossed the river Merrimack near its mouth, on a bridge of great length, supported by piles, and then entered New Hampshire, soon coming to the first town of that state, called Portsmouth, which has a population of 8000 souls, and was once the resi dence of the colonial governor. Here I made a short stay, pass ing the evening at the house of Mr. J. L. Hayes, to whom we had letters of introduction, where we found a gay party assem bled, and dancing. Next morning I set out on an excursion with Mr. Hayes, to explore the geological features of the neighborhood, which agree with those of the eastern coast generally throughout Massachu setts, and a great part of Maine — a low region of granitic rocks, overspread with heaps of sand and gravel, or with clay, and here and there an erratic or huge block of stone, transported from a distance, and always from the north. Lakes and ponds numerous, as in the country of similar geological composition in the south of Norway and Sweden. Here, also, as in Scandina via, the overlying patches of clay and gravel often contain marine fossil shells of species still living in the Arctic Seas, and belong ing to the genera Saxicava, Astarte, Cardium, Nucula, and others, the same which occur in what we call the northern drift of Ireland and Scotland. Some of the concretions of fine clay, more or less calcareous, met with in New Hampshire, in this CHAP. II.] GEOLOGY. " drift" on the Saco river, thirty miles to the north of Ports mouth, contain the entire skeletons of a fossil fish of the same species as one now living in the Northern Seas, called the cape- Ian (Mallotus villosus), about the size of a sprat, and sold abun dantly in the London markets, salted and dried like herrings. I obtained some of these fossils, which, like the associated shells, show that a colder climate than that now prevailing in this re gion was established in what is termed "the glacial period." Mr. Hayes took me to Kittery, and other localities, where these marine organic remains abound in the superficial deposits. Some of the shells are met with in the town of Portsmouth itself, in digging the foundation of houses on the south bank of the river Piscataqua. This was the most southern spot (lat. 43° 6' N.) to which I yet had traced the fossil fauna of the boulder period, retaining here, as in Canada, its peculiar northern characters, consisting of a profusion of individuals, but a small number of species ; and a great many of those now abounding in the neigh boring sea being entirely absent. It is only farther to the south, and near the extreme southern limit of the drift, or boulder clay, as at Brooklyn, in Long Island, for example, that a mixture of more southern species of shells begin to appear, just as Professor E. Forbes has detected, in the drift of the south of Ireland, the meeting of a Mediterranean and Arctic fauna. Every where around Portsmouth I observed that superficial polish in the rocks, and those long, straight, grooves or furrows, which I before alluded to (p. 18), as having been imprinted by icebergs on the ancient floor of the ocean. By the inland posi tion of these fossil shells of recent species, the geologist can prove that, at times comparatively modern in the earth's history, the larger part of New England and Canada lay for ages beneath the waters of the sea, Lake Champlain and the valley of the St. Lawrence being then gulfs, and the White Mountains an island.* But it is a curious fact that we also discover along this same eastern coast signs no less unequivocal of partial subsidence of land at a period still more recent. The evidence consists of swamps, now submerged at low water, containing the roots and * See my "Travels in N. America, 1841-2," vol. ii. p. 142. 34 SUBMARINE FOREST. [CHAP. II. upright stools of the white cedar ( Cupressus thyoides), showing that an ancient forest must once have extended farther seaward. One of these swamps we passed yesterday at Hampton, on the way from Boston to Portsmouth ; and Mr. Hayes gave me speci mens of the submarine wood in as fresh a state as any occurring a few yards deep in a British peat-bog. That some of these repositories of buried trees, though geolo gically of the most modern date, may really be of high antiquity, considered with reference to the history of man, I have no doubt ; and geologists may, by repeated observations, ascertain the min imum of time required for their formation previously to their sub mergence. Some extensive cedar-swamps, for example, of the same class occur on the coast near Cape May, in the southern extremity of the State of New Jersey, on the east side of Dela ware Bay, filled with trees to an unknown depth ; and it is a constant business to probe the soft mud of the swamp with poles for the purpose of discovering the timber. When a log is found, the mud is cleared off, and the log sawed up into proper lengths for shingles or boards. The stumps of trees, from four to five feet, and occasionally six feet in diameter, are found standing with their roots in the place in which they grew, and the trunks of aged cedars are met with in every possible position, some of them lying horizontally under the roots of the upright stumps. Dr. Bresley, of Dennis Creek, counted 1080 rings of annual growth between the center and outside of a large stump six feet in diameter, and under it lay a prostrate tree, which had fallen and been buried before the tree to which the stump belonged first sprouted. This lower trunk was five hundred years old, so that upward of fifteen centuries were thus determined, beyond the shadow of a doubt, as the age of one small portion of a bog, the depth of which is as yet unknown. Mr. Hayes drove me in his carriage through woods of fir on both banks of the Piscataqua, where the ground was covered with that fragrant shrub, the candleberry (Myrica cerifem), the wax of which, derived from its shining black berries, is used for making candles. The odor of its leaves resembles that of our bog-myrtle (Myrica gale). The barberry, also (Berberis vul- CHAP. II.] WILD PLANTS.— SWALLOWS. 35 garis), although not an indigenous plant, is very abundant and ornamental in the woods here. It has overrun, in modern times, the eastern shores of New England, and made its way many miles inland, to the great annoyance of the agriculturists. Some naturalists wonder how it can spread so fast, as the American birds refuse, like the European ones, to feed on. its red berries : but if it be true that cattle, sheep, and goats occasionally browse on this shrub, there is no mystery about the mode of its migration, for the seeds may be sown in their dung. The aromatic shrub called sweet fern (Comptonia asplenifolia), forms nearly as large a proportion of the undergrowth here as does the real fern (Pteris) in some of our English forests. I have seen this part of North America laid down in some botanical maps as the region of asters and solidagos ; and certainly the variety and abundance of golden rods and asters is at this season very striking, although a white everlasting ( GnafaMuin) is almost equally conspicuous. Among other shrubs, I saw the poison-ivy (Rkus radicans), a species of sumach, growing on rocks and walls. It has no effect on some people, but the slightest touch causes an eruption on the skin of others. A New England botanist once told me that, by way of experiment, he rubbed his arm with the leaves, and they gave rise to a painful swelling, which was long in subsiding. In Mr. Hayes's garden at Portsmouth were some of the smaller white-bodied swallows or martins (Hirundo viridis), protected from their enemy, the larger martin (Hirundo purpurea), by having small holes made for them in flower-pots, which the others could not pass through. The larger kind, or house-martin, is encouraged every where, small wooden boxes being made for them on roofs or on the tops of poles, resembling pigeon-houses, which may often be seen on the top of a sign-post before a New England inn. They are useful in chasing away birds of prey from the poultry-yard ; and I once saw a few of them attacking a large hawk. But I suspect they are chiefly favored for mere amusement sake, arid welcomed, like our swallows, as the mes sengers of spring, on their annual return from the south. It is pleasing to hear them chattering with each other, and to mark their elegant forms and bluish-black plumage, or to watch them 36 GLACIAL GROOVES. [CHAP. II on the wing1, floating gently in the air, or darting rapidly after insects. Thousands of these birds, with their young, died in their nests in the spring of 1836, during a storm of cold rain, which lasted two weeks, and destroyed the insects throughout the states of New York and New England. The smaller species (Hifundo vi/ridis) then regained possession of their old haunts, occupying the deserted houses of the more powerful species, which, like the house-sparrow in Europe, has followed the residence of man. The sun was very powerful at noon ; but the severity of the cold here in winter is so great, that a singular effect is produced in the Piscataqua when the thermometer sinks to 15° below zero. The tide pours into the estuary a large body of salt water par taking of the warmer temperature of the gulf stream, and this water, coming into the colder atmosphere, smokes like a thermal spring, giving rise to dense fogs. I had been desirous of making the acquaintance of Mr. Hayes, in consequence of having read, before I left England, an excellent paper published by him in the Boston Journal of Natural History, for 1844, on the Antarctic Icebergs, considered as explanatory of the transportation of rocky masses, and of those polished rocks and glacial grooves and strise before alluded to. He had derived his information from experienced men engaged in the southern whale fisheries, principally merchants of New Bedford, Massa chusetts, and Stonington, Rhode Island. On looking over his original MS. notes, I 'found he had omitted to print some parti culars of the evidence, which I consider of no small interest as throwing light on a class of geological appearances hitherto thought least reconcilable with the ordinary course of nature. As to the carriage of huge fragments of rock for many hundreds of miles, from one region to another, such transportation was formerly appealed to by writers now living as among the marvels of the olden time, resembling the feats of the fabulous ages, and as much transcending the powers of nature in these degenerate days, as the stone hurled by Hector against the Grecian gate, exceeded in weight and size what could now be raised from the ground by two of the strongest of living men (oloi vvv (3poroi). CHAP. II.] ORGANIC REMAINS IN ICE. 37 But after reading the accounts given by Sir James Ross and Captain Wilkes, of the transfer of erratics by ice, from one point to another of the southern seas, these traveled boulders begin to be regarded quite as vulgar phenomena, or matters of every-day occurrence. There still remain, however, among the wonders of the polar regions, some geological monuments which appear sufficiently anomalous when we seek to explain them by modern analogies. I refer to the preservation in ice of the carcasses of extinct species of quadrupeds in Siberia ; not only the rhinoceros originally dis covered, with part of its flesh, by Pallas, and the mammoth afterward met with on the Lena by Adams, but still more recently the elephant dug up by Midderidorf, September, 1846, which retained even the bulb' of the eye in a perfect state, and which is now to be seen in the museum at Moscow.^ In part of the unpublished evidence collected by Mr. Hayes, are statements which may perhaps aid us in elucidating this ob scure subject ; at all events they are not undeserving of notice, were it only to prove that nature is still at work in the icy regions enveloping a store of organic bodies in ice, which, after a series of geographical and climatal changes, and the extermination of some of the existing cetacea, might strike the investigator at some remote period of the future as being fully as marvelous as any monuments of the past hitherto discovered. The first extract, which I make, with Mr. Hayes' permission, is from the evidence of Captain Benjamin Pendleton, of Stonington, who, from his knowledge of the South Shetland fisheries, was chosen by the American government to accompany the late exploring expedition to the Antarctic seas. He had cruised in 1820 and 1822 for GOO miles along the lofty ice cliffs bounding the great southern conti nent. He says, that in 1821 , when he wished to bury a seaman in one of the South Shetland islands, several parties of twelve men each, were set to dig a grave in the blue sand and gravel ; but after penetrating in nearly a hundred places through six or eight inches of sand, they came down every where upon solid blue ice. At last he determined to have a hole cut in the ice, of which the island principally consisted, and the body of the man * See "Principles of Geology," by the Author, 7th ed. 1847, p. 83. 38 WHALE DISCOVERED IN AN ICEBERG. [CHAP. II. was placed in it. In 1822, Captain Barnham dug out the body from the ice, and found the clothes and flesh perfectly fresh as when they were buried. So far this narrative may be said merely to confirm and to bear out another published by Captain Kendall, of our navy, in the London Geographical Journal, 1830 (pp. 65, 66), where he relates that the soil of Deception Island, one of the South Shet- lands, consists of ice and volcanic ashes interstratified, and he discovered there the body of a foreign sailor, which had long been buried, with the flesh and all the features perfectly pre served. Mr. Darwin, commenting on that fact, has observed, that as the icy soil of Deception Island is situated between lat. 62° and 63° S., it is nearer the equator by about 100 miles than the locality where Pallas first found the frozen rhinoceros of Si beria, in lat. 64° N.* But Captain Pendleton goes on to relate, that while he was in Deception Island an iceberg was detached from a cliff of ice 800 feet high. The piece which fell off was from 60 to 100 feet deep, and from 1500 to 3000 feet in length. At an elevation of about 280 feet above the level of the sea, part of a whale was seen remaining inclosed in the ice-cliff, the head and anterior parts having broken off about the flippers and fallen down with the detached mass of ice. The species was what the whalers call the " Sulphur-bottom," resembling the fin-back. Captain Pendleton contrived to get out the portion which had fallen, and obtained from it eight or ten barrels of oil. The birds for a long time fed upon the entrails. This fact was known to Captain Beck and others. Captain William Pendleton, another whaler of experience, also informs Mr. Hayes, that skeletons of whales had been met with in the South Shetlaiids, when he visited them, 300 feet above the level of the sea. Thomas Ash also saw, on " Ragged Island" beach, the skeleton and some of the soft parts of a whale many feet above the reach of the highest tides. Captain William Beck, master of a whaling ship, has seen whales' bones and carcasses sixty or seventy feet above the sea-level, and a mile and a half from the water. * Darwin's Journal, 2d ed. p. 249. CHAP. II.] ICEBERGS. 39 To explain how the bodies and skeletons of these inhabitants of the deep, whether found entombed or not in ice, were carried up to considerable heights above the level of the sea, appeared to me at first more difficult than to account for their having been included in solid ice. A few months after my visit to Ports mouth I saw Captain Wilkes, of the United States Exploring Expedition, and called his attention to the problem. He remarked, that the open sea sometimes freezes round the Sand wich Islands, so that ships can not approach within 100 miles of the shore. In like manner, in Antarctic regions, the ocean often freezes over the base of a cliff formed of barrier ice. In all these cases, the sheet of ice, however continuous, does not adhere to the land or the barrier, because the rise and fall of the tide, however slight, causes a rent, permitting the whole mass to move up and down. The snow, drifting off the land in vast quantities during winter, falls over the cliffs upon the frozen surface of the sea, until its weight is such that it causes the whole mass to sink ; and unless the winds and currents happen to float it off, it may go on subsiding till it acquires a great thickness, and may at last touch the bottom. Before this hap pens, however, it usually gets adrift, and, before it has done melting, tumbles over or capsizes more than once. On my return to England, in 1846, I described the same phenomena to my friend Dr. Joseph Hooker, and subsequently to Sir James Ross, and they both of them, without hearing Captain Wilkes's theory, suggested the same explanation, having observed that a great sheet of ice had formed in the sea by the freezing of melted snow on the southern or polar side of every Antarctic island. If the carcass of a dead whale be thrown up on this ice, it must soon be buried under other snow drifted from the land, and will at length be inclosed in the lower part of an. iceberg, formed in the manner before described. The frequent overturning or reversal of position of these great masses, arises from the temperature of the water at the depth of 1000 or 1500 feet, to which they frequently descend, being much warmer than the incumbent air or more superficial water. When the inferior or submerged portions melt, the center of gravity is soon changed • 40 ICEBERGS. [CHAP. II. and a magnificent example is recorded by Sir James Ross of the capsizing of a great island of ice near Possession Island, in lat. 71° 56' S. What had previously been the bottom came up and rose 100 feet above the surface of the sea, and the whole of the new top and eastern side were seen to be covered with earth and stones. A party landed on it, and a slight .rocking motion was still perceptible, such as no waves or swell of the sea, even in a storm, are ever capable of imparting to such large icebergs.^ The lower down the carcass of the whale is buried in the original berg, the higher up will it be raised above the level of the sea when the same berg has turned over. # Sir J. Ross's Voyage to Southern Seas, vol. i. pp. 195, 196. CHAPTER III. Portland in Maine. — Kennebeo River. — Timber Trade. — Fossil Shells at Gardiner. — Augusta, the Capital of Maine. — Legal Profession : Advo cates and Attorneys. — Equality of Sects. — Religious Toleration. — Cal- vinistic Theology. — Day of Doom. Sept. 25, 1845. — HERE we are at mid-day fK-ing along at the rate of twenty-five and occasionally thirty miles an hour, on our way to Portland, the chief city of Maine. It was only yes terday afternoon that we left Boston, and in less than three hours we performed what would have been formerly reckoned a good day's journey of forty-five miles, had seen at Portsmouth some collections of natural history, and afterward gone to a ball. In the forenoon of this day I have made geological excursions 011 both banks of the Piscataqua, arid before dark shall have sailed far up the Kennebec. It is an agreeable novelty to a naturalist to combine the speed of a railway and the luxury of good inns with the sight of the native forest — the advantages of civilization with the beauty of unreclaimed nature — no hedges, few plowed fields, the wild plants, trees, birds, and animals undisturbed. Cheap as are the fares, these railroads, I am told, yield high profits, because the land through which they run costs nothing. When we had traversed a distance of about sixty miles, the cars glided along some rails over the wharf at Portland, and we almost stepped from our seats on to the deck of the Huntress steamer, which was ready to convey us to the mouth of the Kennebec river. After threading a cluster of rocky islands adorned with fir and birch in the beautiful Bay of Casco, we came to the Sound, and for a short space were in the open sea, with no view but that of a distant coast. As there was nothing to see, we were glad to be invited to dinner, and were conducted to the gentlemen's cabin, a sort of sunk story, to which the ladies, or the women of every degree, were, according to the usual etiquette, taken down first, and carefully seated at the table by the captain, before the 42 NEW ENGLAND TRAVELING. [CHAP. III. gentlemen were admitted. Above this apartment where we dined was the ladies' cabin, and above that the upper deck, where we sat to enjoy the prospect as we approached the mouth of the Kennebec. In the forepart of the vessel, on this upper deck, is a small room, having windows on all sides, where the man at the helm is stationed ; riot at the stern, as in our boats, which is considered by the Americans as a great improvement on the old system, as the steersman's view can not be intercepted, and the passengers are never requested to step on one side to enable him to^ see his way. Directions to the engineer, instead of being transmitted by voice through an intermediate messenger, are given directly by one or more loud strokes on a bell. The fuel used is anthracite, the absence of oxygen being compensated by a strong current of air kept up by what resembles a winnow- ing-machine, and does the work of a pair of bellows. After sailing up the Kennebec about fifteen miles we came to Bath, a town of 5000 souls, chiefly engaged in ship-building, a branch of industry in which the State of Maine ranks first in the Union ; the materials consisting of white oak and pine, the growth of native forests. Large logs of timber squared, and each marked with the owner's name, are often cast into the river, sometimes far above Augusta, and come floating down 100 miles to this place. In wrinter many of them get frozen into the ice and imprisoned for six or seven months, until the late spring releases them, and then not a few of them are carried far out into the Atlantic, where they have been picked up, with the owner's name still telling the place of their origin. The water is salt as far as Bath, above which it is fresh and freezes over, so as to allow sleighs and skaters to cross it in winter, although the influence of the tide extends as far up as Augusta, about forty miles above Bath. I am informed that the whole body of the ice rises and falls, cracking along the edges where it is weakest. Over the fissures planks are placed to serve as a bridge, or snow is thrown in, which freezes, and affords a passage to the central ice. The Kennebec, besides being enlivened by the " lumber trade," is at this season whitened with the sails of vessels laden with hay, which has been compressed into small bulk by the CHAP. III.] THE KENNEBEC. 43 power of steam. Many of these merchantmen are destined for New York, where the unusual heat and drought of the summer has caused a scanty crop of grass, but hundreds are bound to the distant ports of Mobile and New Orleans ; so that the horses of Alabama and Louisiana are made to graze on the sweet pastures of Maine, instead of the coarser and ranker herbage of the south ern prairies. In a few months these northern-built ships will bring back bales of cotton for factories newly established by Bos ton capitalists, and worked on this river both by water power and steam. Such are the happy consequences of the annexation of Louisiana to the United States. But for that event, the fa vorite theories of political economy in New England, and the duty of protecting native industry, would have interposed many a custom-house and high tariff bet\vreen Maine and the valley of the Mississippi. As we passed Bath a large eagle, with black wings and a white body, was seen soaring over our heads ; and, a few miles above, where the salt and fresh water meet, seals were seen sporting close to the steamer. The Kermebec is said to abound in salmon. We admired the great variety of trees on its banks ; two kinds of birch with larger leaves than our British species, several oaks arid pines, the hemlock with foliage like a yew-tree, and the silver-fir, and two species of maple, the sugar or rock maple (Acer saccharinuni), and the white (A. dasycarpum), both of which yield sugar. To these two trees the beauty and brilliancy of the autumnal tints of the American forests are due, the rock maple turning red, purple and scarlet, and the white, first yellow, and then red. We were conveyed in the Huntress to Gardiner, the head of steam- boat navigation here, sixty-eight miles distant from Port land, where we visited the country house of Mr. Gardiner, whose family gave its name to the settlement. It is built in the style of an English country seat, and surrounded by a park. At Mr. Allen's I examined, with much interest, a collection of fossil shells and Crustacea, made by Mrs. Allen from the drift or " gla cial" deposits of the same age as those of Portsmouth, already described. Among other remains I recognized the tooth of a 44 FOSSIL REMAINS. [CHAP. III. walrus, similar to one procured by me in Martha's Vineyard,* and other teeth, since determined for me by Professor Owen as belonging to the buffalo or American bison. These are, I be lieve, the first examples of land quadrupeds discovered in beds of this age in the United States. The accompanying shells consist ed of the common mussel (Hfytilus edulis), Saxciava rugosa, ]\Iya arenaria, Pecten Islandicus, and species of the genera Astartc, Nucula, &c. The horizontal beds of clay and sand which contain these remains of northern species, and which imply that the whole region was beneath the sea at no distant period, impart to the scenery of the country bordering the Kerme- bec its leading features. The deposit of clay and sand is 170 feet thick in some places, and numerous valleys 70 feet deep are hollowed out of it by every small stream. At Augusta I saw this modern tertiary formation, 100 feet thick, resting on a ledge of mica schist, the shells being easily obtained from an under mined cliff of clay. Tn some places, as at Gardiner, conical hil locks, chiefly of gravel, about fifty feet high, and compared here, on account of the regularity of their form, to Indian mounds^ stand isolated near the river. I conceive them to owe their shape to what the geologists term " denudation," or the action of waves and currents, which, as the country was rising gradu- al]y out of the sea, removed the surrounding softer clay arid left these masses undestroyed. They would offer resistance to the force of moving water by the great weight and size of their com ponent materials ; for in them we find not only pebbles, but many large boulders of granite and other rocks. Mr. Allen drove us in his carriage to Augusta, six miles from Gardiner, and 200 miles N.E. of Boston, where we visited the State House, handsomely built in the Grecian style, with a por tico and large columns, the stone used being the white granite of this country. The rooms for the two houses of the legislature are very convenient. I was shown the library by the governor, who called my attention to some books and maps on geology, and talked of a plan for resuming the geological survey of the State, not yet completed. * See " Travels," vol. i. p. 256. CHAP. III.] LEGAL PROFESSION. 45 Sept. 27. — Returned by the Huntress steamer to Portland, after sailing at the rate of fourteen miles an hour. On board were some lawyers, to one of whom, a judge in the State of Maine, Mr. Gardiner had introduced me. The profession of the law is, of all others in the United States, that which attracts to it the greatest number of able and highly educated men, not only for its own sake, but because it is a great school for the training up of politicians. The competition of so many practitioners cheapens fees, and, although this is said to promote litigation, it has at least the great advantage of placing the poor man on a more equal footing with the rich, as none but the latter can attempt to assert their rights in countries where the cost of a successful law-suit may be ruinous. Practically, there is much the same subdivision of labor in the legal profession here as in England ; for a man of eminence enters into partnership with some one or more of the younger or less talented lawyers, who play the part assigned with us to junior counsel and attorneys. There are, however, no two grades here corresponding to barris ter and attorney, from the inferior of which alone practitioners can pass in the regular course of promotion to the higher. Every lawyer in the United States may plead in court, and address a jury ; and, if he is successful, may be raised to the bench : but he must qualify as counselor, in order to be entitled to plead in the Supreme Courts, where cases are heard involving points at issue between the tribunals of independent states. The line drawn between barrister and attorney in Great Britain, which never existed even in colonial times in Massachusetts, could only be tolerated in a country where the aristocratic element is ex ceedingly predominant. In the English Church, where seats in the House of Lords are held by the bishops, we see how the rank of a whole profession rnay be elevated by making high distinc tions conferred only on a few, open to all. That, in like man ner, the highest honors of the bar and bench might be open without diriment to the most numerous class of legal practition ers in Great Britain, seems to be proved by the fact, that occa sionally some attorneys of talent, by quitting their original lino of practice and starting anew, can attain, like the present Chief 46 EQUALITY OF SECTS. [CHAP. III. Justice of the Common Pleas, to places of the first dignity. In Canada, under British rule, it is the custom to grant licenses to the same individual to practice indifferently in all the courts as advocate, solicitor, attorney, and proctor. When we consider the confidential nature of the business transacted by English at torneys, the extent of property committed to their charge, the manner in which they are consulted in family affairs of the ut most delicacy, as in the framing of marriage contracts and wills, and observe, moreover, how the management of elections falls into their hands, we may well question the policy of creating an artificial line of demarkation between them and the advocates, marked enough to depress their social rank, and to deter many y^ung men of good families, who can best afford to obtain a lib eral education, from entering the most profitable, and, in reality, the most important branch of the profession. I have mentioned the Supreme Courts ; in these, in each state, cases are heard involving points at issue between two independent jurisdictions ; and in order to preserve uniformity in the interpret ation of many different codes, as in the statutes passed from time to time by state legislatures, the previous decisions of courts of law are referred to, and the authority of judges of high repute in any part of the Union, and even in Great Britain, frequently cited. As points of international law are perpetually arising between so many jurisdictions, the Supreme Courts afford a fine field for the exercise of legal talent, and for forming jurists oi enlarged views. Portland, with 15,000 inhabitants, is the principal city of Maine ; gay and cheerful, with neat white houses, shaded by avenues of trees on each side of the wide streets, the bright sunny air unsullied, as usual in New England, by coal smoke. There are churches here of every religious denomination : Congregation- alists, Baptists, Methodists, Free-will Baptists, Universalists, Unitarians, Episcopalians, Roman Catholics, and Quakers, al] living harmoniously together. The late governor oPthe state was a Unitarian ; and, as if to prove the perfect toleration of churches the most opposed to each other, they have recently had a Honuui Catholic governor CHAP. III.] RELIGIOUS TOLERATION. 47 On Sunday we accompanied the family of a lawyer, to whom we had brought letters, to a Unitarian church. There was nothing doctrinal in the sermon, and, among other indications of the altered and softened feelings of the sects which have sprung from the old Puritan stock, I remarked a gilt cross placed over the altar. The officiating minister told me that this step had been taken with the consent of the congregation, though not with out the opposition of some of his elders. The early Puritans re garded this symbol as they did pictures and images, as the badges of superstition, the relics of the idolatrous religion so lately re nounced by them ; and it is curious to read, in the annals of the first colonists at Salem, how, in 1634, the followers of Roger Williams, the Brownist, went so far as to cut that "popish em blem," the red cross, out of the royal standard, as one which the train bands ought no longer to follow.^ During my first visit to the New England States, I was greatly at a loss to comprehend by what means so large a pop ulation had been brought to unite great earnestness of religious feeling with so much real toleration. In seeking for the cause, we must go farther back than the common schools, or at least the present improved state of popular education ; for we are still met with the question, How could such schools be maintained by the state, or by compulsory assessments, on so liberal a footing, in spite of the fanaticism and sectarian prejudices of the vulgar ? When we call to mind the religious enthusiasm of the early Pu ritans, and how at first they merely exchanged a servile obedience to tradition, and the authority of the Church, for an equally blind scripturalism, or implicit faith in the letter of every part of the Bible, acting as if they believed that God, by some miraculous process, had dictated all the Hebrew words of the Old, and all the Greek of the New Testament ; nay, the illiterate among them cherishing the same superstitious veneration ibr every sylla ble of the English translation — how these religionists, who did riot hesitate to condemn several citizens to be publicly whipped for denying that the Jewish code was obligatory on Christians as a rule of life, arid who were fully persuaded that they alone were the # Graham's History of United Stales, vol. i. p. 227. 48 CALVINISTIC THEOLOGY. [CHAP. III. chosen people of God, should bequeath to their immediate posterity such a philosophical spirit as must precede the organization by the whole people of a system of secular education acceptable to all, and accompanied by the social and political equality, of religious sects such as no other civilized community has yet achieved — this certainly is a problem well worthy of the study of every reflecting mind. To attribute this national characteristic to the voluntary system, would be an anachronism, as that is of com paratively modern date in New England ; besides that the de pendence of the ministers on their flocks, by transferring ecclesi astical power to the multitude, only gives to their bigotry, if they be ignorant, a more dangerous sway. So, also, of universal suf frage ; by investing the million with political power, it renders the average amount of their enlightenment the measure of the liberty enjoyed by those who entertain religious opinions disap proved of by the majority. Of the natural effects of such power, and the homage paid to it by the higher classes, even where the political institutions are only partially democratic, we have abundant exemplification in Europe, where the educated of the laity and clergy, in. spite of their comparative independence of the popular will, defer outwardly to many theological notions of the vulgar with which they have often no real sympathy. To account for 'the toleration prevailing in New England and the states chiefly peopled from thence, we must refer to a com bination of many favorable circumstances, some of them of ancient date, and derived from the times of the first Puritan settlers. To these I shall have many opportunities of alluding in the sequel ; but I shall mention now a more modern cause, the effect of which was brought vividly before my mind, in conversations with sev eral lawyers of Maine, New Hampshire, and Massachusetts, whom I fell in with on this tour. I mean the reaction against the extreme Calvinism of the church first established in this part of America, a movement which has had a powerful tendency to subdue and mitigate sectarian bitterness. In order to give me some -idea of the length to which the old Calvinistic doctrines were instilled into the infant mind, one of my companions pre sented me with a curious poem, called the " Day of Doom," CHAP. III.] « DAY OF DOOM." 49 formerly used as a school book in New England, and which elderly persons known to him had been required, some seventy years ago, to get by rote as children. This task must have occu pied no small portion of their time, as this string of doggrel rhymes makes up no less than 224 stanzas of eight lines each. They were written by Michael Wigglesworth, A.M., teacher of the church of Maiden, New England, and profess to give a poet ical description of the Last Judgment. A great array of Scrip ture texts, from, the Old and New Testament, is cited throughout in the margin as warranty for the orthodoxy of every dogma. Were such a composition now submitted to any committee of school managers or teachers in New England, they would not only reject it, but the most orthodox among them would shrewdly suspect it to be a " weak invention of the enemy," designed to caricature, or give undue prominence to, precisely those tenets of the dominant Calvinism which the moderate party object to, as outraging human reason and as derogatory to the moral attri butes of the Supreme Being. Such, however, were not the feel ings of the celebrated Cotton Mather, in the year 1705, when he preached a funeral sermon on the author, which I find prefixed to my copy of the sixth edition, printed in 1715. On this occa sion he not only eulogizes Wigglesworth, but affirms that the poem itself contains " plain truths drest up in a plain meter ;" and further prophesies, that " as the { Day of Doom' had been often reprinted in both Englands, it will last till the Day itself shall arrive." Some extracts from this document will aid the reader to estimate the wonderful revolution in popular opinion brought about in one or two generations, by which the harsher and sterner features of the old Calvinistic creed have been nearly eradicated. Its professors, indeed, may still contend as stoutly as ever for the old formularies of their hereditary faith, as they might fight for any other party banner ; but their fanatical de votion to its dogmas, and their contempt for all other Christian churches, has happily softened down or disappeared. The poem opens with the arraignment of all " the quick and dead," who are summoned before the throne of God, and, having each pleaded at the bar, are answered by their Judge. Some VOL, I. — *C 50 " DAY OF DOOM." [CHAP. III. of them declare that the Scriptures are " so dark, that they have puzzled the wisest men ;" others that, being " heathens," and having never had " the Avritten Word preached to them," they are entitled to pardon ; in reply to which, the metaphysical sub tleties of the doctrines of election and grace are fully propound ed. The next class of offenders might awaken the sympathies of any heart not protected by a breastplate of theological dog matism : — " Then to the bar all they drew near Who died in infancy, And never had, or good or bad, Effected personally," &c. These infants remonstrate against the hardship of having Adam's guilt laid to their charge : — "Not we, but he, ate of the tree Whose fruit was interdicted ; Yet on us all, of his sad fall, The punishment's inflicted." The Judge replies, that none can suffer " for what they never did :"— - (171.) "But what you call old Adam's fall, And only his trespass, You call amiss to call it his, Both his and yours it was. (172.) "He was designed, of all mankind. To be a public head ; A common root, whence all should shoot, And stood in all their stead. " He stood and fell, did ill and well Not for himself alone, But for you all, who now his fall And trespass would disown. (173.) " If he he had stood, then all his brood Had been established," &c. (174.) " Would you have grieved to have received Though Adam so much good?" &c. " Since then to share in his welfare You would have been content, You may with reason, share in his treason, And in his punishm^ : " CHAP. III.] " DAY OF DOOM." 51 A great body of Scripture texts are here introduced in confirm ation ; but the children are told, even including those " who from the womb unto the tomb were straightway carried," that they are to have " the easiest room in hell :" — (181.) "The glorious King, thus answering, They cease, and plead no longer, Their consciences must needs confess His reasons are the stronger." The pains of hell and the constant renovation of strength to enable the " sinful wight" to bear an eternity of torment, are then dilated upon at such length, and so minutely, and a picture so harrowing to the soul is drawn, as to remind us of the excel lent observations on this head of a modern New England divine. "It is not wonderful," he says, " that this means of subjugating the mind should be freely used and dreadfully perverted, when we consider that no talent is required to inspire fear, and that coarse minds and hard hearts are signally gifted for this work of torture." "It is an instrument of tremendous power," he adds, " enabling a Protestant minister, whilst disclaiming papal pre tensions, to build up a spiritual despotism, and to beget in those committed to his guidance a passive, servile state of mind, too agitated for deliberate and vigorous thought."^ That the pious minister of Maiden, however, had no desire to usurp any undue influence over his panic-stricken hearers, is very probable, and that he was only indulging in the usual strain of the preachers of his time, when he told of the " yelling of the damned, as they were burnt eternally in the company of devils," and went on to describe how — " God's vengeance feeds the flame With piles of wood and brimstone flood, That none can quench the same." We next learn that the peace and calm blessedness of the saints elect, who are received into heaven, is not permitted to be disturbed by compassion for the damned ; mothers and fathers feeling no pity for their lost children : — * Channing's Works, London, voL iii. p. 263, 52 "DAY OF DOOM." [CHAP. III. " The godly wife conceives no grief, Nor can she shed a tear. For the sad fate of her dear mate When she his doom doth hear." The great distinction between the spirit of the times when these verses were written and the present age, appears to be this, that a paramount importance was then attached to those doctrinal points in which the leading sects differed from each other, whereas now Christianity is more generally considered to consist essen tially in believing and obeying those scriptural precepts on which all churches agree. CHAPTER IV. Journey from Portland to the White Mountains. — Plants. — Churches, School-houses. — Temperance Hotel. — Intelligence of New Englanders. — Climate, Consumption. — Conway. — Division of Property. — Every Man his own Tenant. — A\\tumnal Tints. — Bears hybernating. — Willey Slide. — Theory of Scratches and Grooves on Rocks. — Scenery. — Waterfalls and Ravines. — The Notch. — Forest Trees and Mountain Plants. — Fabyan's Hotel. — Echo. Sept. 28, 1845. — LEAVING Portland and the sea-coast, we now struck inland in a westerly direction toward the White Mountains, having hired a carriage which carried us to Standish. We passed at first over a low, featureless country, but enlivened by the brilliant autumnal coloring of the foliage, especially the bright red, purple, and yellow tints of the maple. The leaves of these trees and of the scrub oak had been made to change color by the late frost of the 10th of this month. On the borders of the road, on each side, mixed with the fragrant " sweet fern," we saw abundance of the Spircea tomentosa, its spike of purplish flowers now nearly faded. The name of " hard hack" was given to it by the first settlers, because the stalk turned the edge of the mower's scythe. There were also golden rods, everlastings, and asters in profusion ; one of the asters being called " frost blow," because flowering after the first frost. We also gathered on the ground the red fruit of the checkerberry (Gaulteria pro cumbent), used in New England to flavor sweetmeats. By the side of these indigenous plants was the common English sell-heal (Prunella vulgaris), the mullein ( Verbascum tliapsus), and other flowers, reminding me of the remark of an American botanist, that New England has become the garden of European weeds ; so that in some agricultural counties near the coast, such as Essex in Massachusetts, the exotics almost outnumber the native plants. It is, however, found, that the farther we travel northward, toward the region where North America and Europe approach 54 CHURCHES.— SCHOOL-HOUSES. [CHAP. IV each other, the proportion of plants specifically common to the two continents is constantly on the increase ; whereas in passing to the more southern states of the Union, we find almost every indigenous species to be distinct from European plants. Although the nights are cold, the sun at mid-day is very hot, the contrast of temperature in the course of each twenty-four hours being great, like that of the summer and winter of this climate. We journeyed on over very tolerable roads without paying turnpikes, one only, I am told, being established in all Maine. The expenses of making and repairing the highways are defrayed by local taxes, a surveyor being appointed for each district. We went through the villages of Gorham, Standish, Baldwin, Hiram, and Bloomfield, to Conway, and then began to enter the mount ains, the scenery constantly improving as we proceeded. Here and there we saw Indian corn cultivated, but the summer of Maine and New Hampshire is often too short to bring this grain to maturity. Usually, in a single village, we saw three, four, or five churches, each representing a different denomination ; the Con- gregationalists, Baptists, Methodists, and now and then, though more rarely, the Unitarians. Occasionally, in some quiet spot where two village roads cross, we saw a small, simple building, and learned that it was the free or common school provided by law, open to all, not accepted as a bounty, but claimed as a right, where the children of rich and poor, high and low, and of every sect, meet upon perfect equality. It is a received political maxirn here, that society is bound to provide education, as well as security of life and property, for all its members. One evening, as we were drawing near to a straggling village, in the twilight, we were recommended by a traveler, whom we had met on the road, to take up our quarters at a temperance hotel, where, he said, " there would be no loafers lounging and drinking drams in the bar-room." We looked out for the sign, and soon saw it, surmounted by a martin-house of four stories, each diminishing in size from the bottom to the top, but all the apartments now empty, the birds having taken flight, warned by CHAP. IV.] TEMPERANCE HOTEL. 55 the late frost. "We had, indeed, been struck with the dearth of the feathered tribe in Maine at this season, the greater number of birds being migratory. As soon as our carriage stopped at the door, we were ushered by the host and his wife into a small parlor, where we found a blazing wood fire. It was their private sitting-room at times, when they had no guests, and on the table were books on a variety of subjects, but most of them of a reli gious or serious character, as Bishop Watson's Apology in reply to Tom Paine. We saw, also, a treatise on Phrenology, styled " The only True Philosophy," and Shakspeare, and the poems of Cowper and Walter Scott. In each window were placed two chairs, not ready to be occupied, as they would be in most coun tries, but placed face to face, or with their fronts touching each other, the usual fashion in New England. On one of the walls was seen, in a gilt frame, the Declaration of Independence, with all the signatures of the subscribers, sur rounded by vignettes or portraits of all the ten presidents of the United States, from General Washington to Mr. Tyler. On another side of the room was a most formidable likeness of Daniel Webster, being an engraving published in Connecticut. Leaning over the portrait of the great statesman, is represented an aged man holding a lantern in his hand, and, lest the mean ing of so classical an allusion should be lost, we read below — " Diogenes his lantern needs no more, An honest man is found, the search is o'er." While supper was preparing, I turned over a heap of news papers, of various shades of politics. One of them contained a spirited reply to the leading article of an extreme democratic journal, which had enlarged on a favorite text of the popular party, " The whole of Oregon is ours." In another I saw, in large type, " The continent, the whole continent down to the isthmus ;" so that, before Texas is yet fairly annexed, the imagination of the " more territory" zealots has incorporated all Mexico, if not Central America, into the Union. In the obitu aries were recorded, as usual, the names of several " revolutionary soldiers," aged eighty-five and ninety, and I spent some minutes 56 PROVINCIAL NEWSPAPERS. [CHAP. IV. in wondering why they who fought for republican independence had been so frequently rewarded with longevity, till it occurred to me that, he who took the field before 1776 could not die a juvenile in 1845. Among other electioneering addresses, I read the following : " Fellow democrats, the Philistines are upon us, the whigs are striving to sow dissension in our ranks, but our object must be to place in the senate a sterling democrat," &c. Such an appeal to electors who are to fill up a vacancy in the more conservative branch of the Congress at Washington, is suf ficiently startling to an Englishman. Another article, headed, "Henry Clay, President for 1848," seemed a most premature anticipation of a future and distant contest, Mr. Polk having just been chosen for the next four years as first magistrate, after many months of excitement and political turmoil. Yet, upon the whole, the provincial newspapers appear to me to abound in useful and instructive matter, with many well-selected extracts from modern publications, especially travels, abstracts of lectures on temperance or literary and scientific subjects, letters on agriculture, or some point of political economy or commercial legislation. Even in party politics, the cheapness of the innumerable daily and weekly papers enables every villager to read what is said on more than one side of each question, and this has a tendency to make the multitude think for themselves, and become well informed on public affairs. We happened to be the only strangers in the tavern, and, when supper was brought in by the landlord and his wife, they sat down beside us, begged us to feel at home, pressed us to eat, and evidently considered us more in the light of guests whom they must entertain hospitably, than as customers. Our hostess, in particular, who had a number of young children and no nurse to help her, was willing to put herself to some inconvenience rather than run the risk of our feeling lonely. Their manners were pleasing, and, when they learned that we were from En gland, they asked many questions about the free-kirk movement in Scotland, and how far the system of national education there differed from that in Prussia, on which the landlord had been reading an article in a magazine. They were greatly amused CHAP. IV.] INTELLIGENCE OF NEW ENGLANDERS. 57 when I told them that some of the patriots of their State had betrayed to me no slight sensitiveness and indignation about an expression imputed to Lord Palmerston in a recent debate on the Canadian border-feud, when he spoke of " the wild people of Maine." They were most curious to learn the names of the rocks and plants we had collected, and told us that at the free-school they had been taught the elements of geology and botany. They iff- forrned us that in these rural districts, many who teach in the winter months spend the money they receive for their salary in educating themselves in some college during the remainder of the year ; so that a clever youth may in this way rise from the humblest station to the bar or pulpit, or become a teacher in a large town. Farm laborers in the State, besides being boarded and found in clothes, receive ten dollars, or two guineas, a month wages, out of which they may save and " go west," an expression every where equivalent to bettering one's condition. " The pros pect of heaven itself," says Cooper, in one of his novels, " would have no charms for an American of the back-woods, if he thought there was any place farther west." I remarked that most of the farmers and laborers had pale complexions and a care-worn look. " This was owing partly," said the landlord, " to th*6 climate, for many were consumptive, and the changes from intense heat to great cold are excessive here; and party** to the ambitious, striving character of the natives, who £f, ophis, snake. In addition to these published statements, Colonel Perkins, of Boston, had the kindness to lay before me his notes, made in July, 1817, when he saw the animal. He counted fourteen pro jections, six feet apart, on the back, which he imagined to be vertical flexures of the body when in motion ; but he also saw the body bent horizontally into the figure of the letter S. It was of a chocolate brown color, the head flat, and about a foot across. A friend of his took a pencil sketch of it, which was found to resemble Pontoppidan's figure.*' Respecting the length, Mr. Mansfield, a friend of the Colonel, was driving a one-horse vehicle on a road skirting Gloucester Bay, along the edge of a cliff, fifty or sixty feet in perpendicular height, when he saw the sea-serpent at the base of the cliff on the white beach, where there was not more than six or seven feet water, and, giving the reins to his wife, looked down upon the creature, and made up his mind that it was ninety feet long. He then took his wife to the spot, and asked her to guess its length, and she said it was as long as the wharf behind their house, and this measured about 100 feet. While they were looking down on it, the creature appeared to be alarmed, and started off. I asked another Bos- tonian, Mr. Cabot, who saw the monster in 1818, whether it might not have been a shoal of porpoises followirg each other in a line, at the distance of one or two yards, and tumbling over so * See "Silliman's Journal," vol. ii. p. 156. CHAP. V1IL] AMERICAN DESCRIPTIONS. 113 as to resemble a string of floating barrels in motion. He said that after this explanation had been suggested to him, he was one of thirty persons who ran along the beach at Nahant, near Boston, when the sea serpent was swimming very near the shore. They were all convinced that it was one animal, and they saw it raise its head out of the water. He added that there were at that time two sea serpents fishing in the Bay at once. Among many American narratives of this phenomenon -which have been communicated to me, I shall select one given me by my friend Mr. William M'llvaine of Philadelphia, because it seems to attest the fact of the creature having wandered as far south as Cape Hatteras, in North Carolina, lat. 35°. " Captain Johnson, of New Jersey, was sailing, in the year 1806, from the West Indies, on the inner edge of the gulf stream, in a deeply laden brig, when they were becalmed, and the crew and passen gers awe-struck by the sudden apparition of a creature having a cylindrical body of great length, and which lifted up its head eight feet above the water. After gazing at them for several minutes it retreated, making large undulations like a snake." The story had been so much discredited that the captain would only relate it to intimate friends. After the year 1817, every marvelous tale was called in the United States a snake story ; and when Colonel Perkins went to Washington twenty years ago, and was asked if he had ever known a person who had seen the sea serpent, he answered that he was one of the unfortunate individuals who saw it himself. I confess that when I left America in 1846, I was in a still more unfortunate predicament, for I believed in the sea serpent with out having seen it. Not that I ever imagined the northern seas to be now inhabited by a gigantic ophidian, for this hypothesis has always seemed to me in the highest degree improbable, seeing that, in the present state of the globe, there is no great develop ment of reptile life in temperate or polar regions, whether in the northern or southern hemisphere. When we enter high latitudes, such as those in which the creature called a sea serpent most frequently occurs, we find even the smaller reptilians, such as frogs and newts, to grow rare or disappear ; and there are no 114 SEA MONSTER AT STRONSA. [CHAP. VIII. representatives of the hydrophis or true water-snake, nor of tor toises, nor of the batrachian or lizard tribes. In like manner, in the geological periods, immediately ante cedent to that when the present molluscous fauna came into existence, there was a similar absence of large reptiles, although there were then, as now, in colder latitudes, many huge sharks, seals, narwals, and whales. If, however, the creature observed in North America and Norway, should really prove to be some unknown species of any one of these last-mentioned families of vertebrata, I see no impropriety in its retaining the English name of sea serpent, just as one of the seals is now called a sea elephant, and a small fish of the Mediterranean, a sea horse ; while other marine animals are named sea mice and urchins, although they have only a fanciful resemblance to hedgehogs or mice. Some naturalists have argued that, if it were an undescribed species, some of its bones must, ere this, have been washed ashc-re ; but I question whether we are as yet so well acquainted with all the tenants of the great deep as to entitle us to attach much weight to this argument from negative evidence ; and I learn from good zoologists that there are whales so rare as never to have been seen since Sibbald described them in the middle of the seventeenth century. There is also a great cetacean, about thirty feet long, called Delphinorhyncus micropterus, of which only three specimens have ever been met with. One of these was thrown ashore forty years ago on the coast of Scotland, and the other two stranded on the shores of Belgium and France, and identified with the British species by Dr. Melville. The doubts, however, which since my return from the United States, I have been led to entertain respecting the distinct and independent existence of the sea serpent, arise from a strong sus picion that it is a known species of sea animal which has% actu ally been cast ashore in the Orkneys, and that some of its bones are now preserved in our museums, showing it to be of the squaline family, and no stranger to some of the zoologists whom it has perplexed, nor to many of the seafaring people whom it has frightened. In the summer of the year 1808, the fishermen CHAP. VIII.] SEA MONSTER AT STRONSA. 115 of the Hebrides were terrified by a monster of huge size and unusual appearance, which created a great sensation in Scotland. Three or four months after this apparition, the body of an enor mous sea monster was washed ashore (Sept. 1808) on the outer reefs at Rothesholm Head in Stronsa, one of the Orkneys, where it was first observed while still entire, and its length measured by two persons; after which, when somewhat decayed, it was swept in by another storm, and stranded on the beach, and there examined by others. Mr. Neill, well known as a naturalist, who had been on a visit to Stronsa the same year, but had left before this occurrence, immediately corresponded with friends on the spot, among others with Mr. Laing, the historian, and with a lawyer and physician, who collected evidence for him. Their affidavits, taken in 1808, respecting the monster, were published in the Transactions of the Wernerian Society, of which Mr. Neill was secretary, and were accompanied by a drawing of the skeleton, obviously ideal and very incorrect, with six legs and a long tail curving several times vertically. The man who sketched it reached the spot too late, and when scarcely any part of the animal remained entire, and the outline is admitted to have been taken by him and altered from a figure chalked out upon a table by another man who had seen it, while one witness denied its resemblance to what he had seen. But a carpenter, whose veracity, I am informed by Mr. Neill (in a letter dated 1848), may be trusted, had measured the carcass, when still whole, with his foot-rule, and found it to be fifty-five long, while a person who also measured it when entire, said it was nine fathoms long. The bristles of the mane, each fourteen inches in length, and described as having been luminous in the dark, were no doubt portions of a dorsal fin in a state of decomposition. One said that this mane extended from the shoulders to within two feet and a half of the tail, another that it reached to the tail : a variance which may entitle us to call in question the alleged con tinuity of the mane down the whole back. So strong was the propensity in Scotland to believe that the Stronsa animal was the sea serpent of the Norwegians, that Mr. Neill himself, after draw ing up for the Wernerian Society his description of it from the 116 SIR EVERARD HOME'S OPINION. [CHAP. VIII. different accounts communicated to him, called it Halsydrus Pon- toppidani. Parts of the cranium, scapular arch, fin, and vertebral column were sent to Dr. Barclay of Edinburgh, who had at that time the finest museum of comparative anatomy north of the Tweed, and he conceived them to belong to a new and entirely unknown monster. If the imagination of good zoologists could be so preoccupied as to cause them at once to jump to the conclusion that the Stronsa animal and the Norwegian sea serpent were one and the same, we can not be surprised that the public in general placed the most implicit faith in that idea. That they did so, is proved by a passage recently published in Beattie's Life of Campbell, where the poet writes thus, in a letter dated February 13th, 1809: — " Of real life let me see what I have heard for the last fort night : first, a snake — rny friend Telford received a drawing of it — has been found thrown on the Orkney Isles ; a sea snake with a mane like a horse, four feet thick, and fifty-five feet long. This is seriously true. Malcolm Laing, the historian, saw it, and sent a drawing of it to my friend."^ Now here we see the great inaccuracy of what may be styled contemporaneous testimony of a highly educated man, who had no motive or disposition to misrepresent facts. From the Wer- rierian Transactions and Mr. Neill's letter, I learn distinctly that Malcolm Laing never went to the shore of Stronsa to see the monster. Fortunately, several of the vertebrae were forwarded, in 1809, to Sir Everard Home, in London, who at once pronounced them to belong to the Squalus maximus, or common basking shark. Figures of other portions sent to Edinburgh to Dr. Barclay, were also published by him in the Wernerian Transactions, and agree very Avell with Home's decision, although it is clear, from Bar clay's Memoir, that he was very angry with the English anat omist for setting him right, and declaring it to be a shark. It was indeed very difficult to believe on any but the most con- * Campbell's Life, vol. ii. p. 169, 170. CHAP. VIII.] SEA SERPENT OF HEBRIDES. 117 vincing evidence that a carcass which was fifty-five feet long could be referable to a species, the largest known individual of which has never exceeded thirty-five or forty feet. But there seems no escape from Home's verdict ; for the vertebrae are still in the College of Surgeons, where I have seen them, quite entire, and so identical with those of the Squalus vnaximus, that Mr. Owen is unwilling to imagine they can belong to any other spe cies of the same genus. Mr. Neill tells me, in his letter, that the basking shark is by no means uncommon in the Orkneys, where it is called the hock- mar, and a large one was killed in Stromness Harbor in 1804, when he was there ; yet it was agreed by all with whom he spoke in 1808, that the Stronsa animal was double the length of the largest hockrnar ever stranded in their times in Orkney. Unfortunately, no one observed the habits and motions of the monster before it was cast ashore ; but the Rev. Donald Maclean, of Small Isles in the Hebrides, was requested to draw up a state ment of what he recollected of the creature which had so much alarmed the fishermen in the summer of the same year. Before he penned his letter, which was printed as an appendix to Bar clay's Memoir in 1809,^ he had clearly been questioned by per sons who were under the full persuasion that what he had seen, and the Stronsa animal, were identical with Pontoppidan's sea serpent. Maclean informs us, that it was about the month of June, 1808, when the huge creature in question, which looked at a distance like a small rock in the sea, gave chase to his boat, and he saw it first from the boat, and afterward from the land. Its head was broad, of a form somewhat oval ; its neck rather smaller. It moved by undulations up and down. When the head was above water, its motion was not so quick ; when most elevated, it appeared to take a view of distant objects It direct ed its " monstrous head," which still continued above water, toward the boat, and then plunged violently under water in pur suit of them. Afterward, when he saw it from the shore, " it moved off with its head above water for about half a mile * Wern. Trans. vOl, i. p. 444, 118 SEA SERPENT OF HEBRIDES. [CHAP. VIII. before he lost sight of it. Its length he believed to be from seventy to eighty feet." " About the same time the crews of thirteen fishing boats, off the island of Canna, were terrified by this monster ; and the crew of one boat saw it coming toward them, between Rum and Canna, with its head high above water."* Mr. Maclean adds, evidently in answer to a question put by his correspondent, thaft he saw nothing of the mane ; arid adds, " when nearest to me it did not raise its head wholly above water, so that the neck being under water, I could perceive no shining filaments thereon, if it had any." And he also observes : "It had 110 fin that I could perceive, and seemed to me to move progressively by undulations up and down." Most of my read ers are probably satisfied by this time, that if nothing had come down to us but oral testimony, or even published accounts with out figures respecting the creature seen in the Hebrides in 1808, as well as that afterward stranded in Orkney, we should all of us have felt sure that both of them were one and the same mon ster, and no other than the sea snake of Pontoppidan, or that so often seen on the eastern coast of North America. How much delusion in this case has been dispelled by the preservation of a few bones ! May we not then presume that other sea serpents were also sharks ? If so, how are we to reconcile recorded ap pearances with this hypothesis ? It was justly remarked by Dr. Fleming, in his British Animals, 1828 (p. 174), that Maclean's account of a creature, which raised its head above the water and viewed distant objects, was opposed to the idea of its being refer able to the class of cartilaginous fishes, for no shark lifts its head out of the sea as it swims. E may also remark, that the de scriptions commonly given, both by the Norwegians and North Americans, would agree better with the appearance of a large seal with a marie, chased by a shoal of porpoises, than with a shark. But when we question the evidence more closely, we must make great allowance for the incompetence of observers wholly ignorant of zoology. In the first place, we must dismiss from our minds the image of a shark as it appears when out of the * Wern. Trans, Edinburgh, vol. i. p. 444, CHAP. VIII.] BASKING SHARK. 119 water, or as stuffed in a museum. The annexed figure represents the outline of the Squalus maximus, of which when immersed, but swimming near the surface, three points only could be seen above water at the same time, namely, the prominence of the back, with the first dorsal fin, a; secondly, the second dorsal fin, b ; and thirdly, the upper lobe of the tail, c. Fig. 3. Squalus maximus, Basking Shark, or Hockinar. a. First dorsal fin ; b. Second dorsal fin ; c. Caudal fin. Dr. Melville informed me that he once saw a large species of shark, swimming at the rate of ten miles an hour, in Torres Strait, off Australia ; and, besides the lateral flexures of the tail, which are the principal propelling power, the creature described as it advanced a series of vertical undulations, not by the actual bending of the body itself, but by the whole animal first rising near to the surface and then dipping down again, so that the dorsal fin and part of the back were occasionally lifted up to a considerable height. Now it strikes me, that if a very huge shark was going at the rate of twenty miles an. hour, as stated by some of the observers, that portion of the back which emerged in front might easily be taken for the head, and the dorsal fin behind it for the mane ; and in this manner we may explain the three projecting points, a, b, c, fig. 1, p. 109. given in the drawing, sketched from memory, by Mr. Barry of Nova Scotia. The smaller undulations seen by the same person, intervening be tween the three larger, may very well be referred to a series of waves raised in the water by a rapid passage through it of so bulky a body. Indeed, some of the drawings which I have seen 120 SEA SNAKE A BASKING SHARK. [CHAP. VI1L of the northern sea snake, agree perfectly with the idea of the projecting back of a shark followed by a succession of waves, diminishing in size as they recede from the dorsal prominence. The parts before mentioned as alone visible above water would form so small a portion of the whole body, that they might easily convey the notion of narrowness as compared to great length ; and the assertion of a few witnesses that the dorsal projections were pointed, may have arisen from their having taken a more accurate look at the shape of the fins, and distinguished them better from the intervening waves of the sea. But, according to this view, the large eyes seen in the " blunt head" by several observers, must have been imaginary, unless in cases where they may have really been looking at a seal. It can hardly be doubted that some good marksmen, both in Norway and New England, who fired at the animal, sent bullets into what they took to be the head, and the fact that the wound seems never to have pro duced serious injury, although in one case blood flowed freely, accords perfectly with the hypothesis that they were firing at the dorsal prominence, and not at the head of a shark. The opinion of most of the observers that the undulations were coincident with the rapid movements of the creature, agrees well with our theory, which refers the greater number of the projections to waves of the sea. On the other hand, as several of the protuberances are real, consisting of three fins and a part of the back, the emergence of these parts may explain what other witnesses beheld. Dr. Melville has suggested to me, that if the speed were as great as stated, and the progressive movement such as he has described,*" the three fins would be first submerged, and then re-emerge in such rapid succession, that the image of one set would be retained on the retina of the eye after another set had become visible, and they might be counted over and over again, and multiplied in definitely. Although I think this explanation unnecessary in most cases, such a confusion of the images seems very possible, when we recollect that the fins would be always mingled •with waves of the sea, which are s-aid, in the Norwegian accounts of 1845, to have been so great, that they broke on the coast in * Ante, p, 119. CKAP. VIII.] CAPT. M'QUHAE'S SEA SERPENT. 121 calm weather, when the serpent swam by, as if a steamer at full speed was passing near the shore. I conclude, therefore, that the sea serpent of North America and the German Ocean is a shark, probably the Squalus maxl- mus, a species which seems, from the measurements taken in Orkney in 1808, to attain sometimes, when old, a much larger size than had ever been previously imagined. It may be objected that this opinion is directly opposed to a great body of evidence which has been accumulating for nearly a century, derived partly from experienced sea-faring men, and partly from observers on the land, some of whom were of the educated class. I answer that most of them caught glimpses only of the creature when in rapid motion and in its own element, four-fifths or more of the body being submerged ; and when, at length, the whole carcass of a monster mistaken for a sea snake was stranded, touched, and measured, and parts of it sent to the ablest anatomists and zo ologists in Scotland, we narrowly escaped having transmitted to us, without power of refutation, a tale as marvelous and fabulous concerning its form and nature, as was ever charged against Pon- toppidan by the most skeptical of his critics.^ * After the above was written, a letter appeared in the English news papers, by Captain M'Quhae, R.N., of the Daedalus frigate, dated Oct. 7, 1848, giving an account of "the sea serpent" seen by him, Aug. 6, 1848, lat. 24° 44' S. between the Cape and St. Helena, about 300 miles distant from the western coast of Africa ; the length estimated at sixty feet, head held four feet above water, with something like the mane of a horse on its back which was straight and inflexible. Professor Owen has declared his opinion, after seeing the drawing of the animal, sent to the Admiralty by Captain M'Quhae, " that it may have been the largest of the seal tribe, the sea-elephant of the southern whalers, Phoca proboscidea, which sometimes attains a length of thirty feet, and individuals of which have been known to have been floated by icebergs toward the Cape. This species has coarse hair on the upper part of its inflexible trunk which might appear like a mane. The chief impelling force would be the deeply immersed terminal fins and tail, which would create a long eddy, readily mistakable for an indefinite prolongation of the body." Mr. Owen's conjecture appears to me very probable ; but, before I heard \t, I had made up my mind that the creature seen by Captain M'Quhae dif fered from the sea serpent of the Norwegians and New Epglanders, from whose description it varies materially, especially in the absence, when at full speed, of apparent undulations, or dorsal prominences. VOL. I. — F CHAPTER IX Boston. — No Private Lodgings. — Boarding-houses. — Hotels. — Effects of the Climate on Health. — Large Fortunes. — Style of Living. — Servants. — Carriages. — Education of Ladies. — Marriages. — Professional Incomes.' — Protectionist Doctrines. — Peculiarities of Language. — Literary Tastes. — Cost of Living. — Alarms of Fire. As we intended to pass nearly two months in Boston, we de termined to look out for private lodgings, such as might be met with in every large town in England, but which we found it almost impossible to procure here. It does not answer to keep houses, or even suites of apartments to let in a city where house- rent is so dear, and well-trained servants so difficult to hire, even at high wages. In this country, moreover, the mass of the peo ple seem to set less value on the privilege of living in private than we English do. Not only strangers and bachelors, but whole families, reside in boarding-houses, usually kept by a widow who has known better days, and is a good manager, and can teach and discipline servants. During a former tour, we had found it irksome to submit to the rules of a boarding-house for any length of time ; to take every meal at a public table, where you are expected to play the agree able to companions often uncongenial, and brought together on no principle of selection ; to join them in the drawing-room a short time before dinner ; to call on them in their rooms, and to listen to gossip arid complaints about the petty quarrels which so often arise among fellow-boarders, as in a ship during a long voyage. The only alternative is to get private rooms in an hotel, which I at length succeeded in procuring at the Tremont House, after I had failed in negotiating a treaty with several landlords to whom I had been recommended. One of these, after showing me his apartments, and stating his terms, ended by saying, "Ours is a temperance house — prayers orthodox." I presume that my countenance betrayed the amusement which this last piece of in- CHAP* IX.] EXCESSIVE INDUSTRY. 123 telligence afforded me, for he instantly added, in an under tone, " But if you and your lady should not attend prayers, it will not be noticed." A Bostonian, who had returned from a tour in England and Ireland, much struck with the poverty of the lower classes, and with the difficulties experienced by those who are struggling to rise in the world, remarked to me, " We ought to be happier than the English, although we do not look so." There is, in fact, a care-worn expression in the countenances of the New Englanders, which arises partly from their striving and anxious disposition, and their habits of hard work, mental and bodily, and partly from the effects of the climate. One of their lawyers expressed to me his regret that the mem bers of his profession, and their most eminent politicians, physicians, and literary men, would not spare themselves, and give up some time to relaxation. " They seem determined," he said, " to realize the sentiment so finely expressed by Milton — • ' To scorn delights, and live laborious days.' Our ancestors had to work fifteen hours out of every twenty-four, in order not to starve in the wilderness ; but we persist in strain ing every nerve when that necessity has ceased." He then reminded me how much more cheerful, plump, and merry the young negro children looked in the South, than those of New England, who had all the appearance of having been forced in their education, and over-crammed at school. I suspect, however, that the principal cause of the different aspect of the Anglo-Saxon race in England and America is the climate. During both our tours through the United States, my wife and I enjoyed excellent health, and were delighted with the clearness of the atmosphere, the bright sun, and the great num ber of cloudless days ; but we were told that, if we staid a second year, we should feel less vigorous. Many who have been , bom in America, of families settled there for several generations, find their health improved by a visit to England, just as if they had returned to their native air ; and it may require several centuries before a race becomes thoroughly acclimatized. 124 EFFECTS OF CLIMATE ON HEALTH. [CHAP. IX. The great difference of the species of indigenous animals and plants in North America, those of the middle and southern states being almost all distinct from the European, points to a wide diversity of climate, the atmosphere being drier, and there being a much greater annual range of the thermometer than in cor responding latitudes on the eastern side of the Atlantic. Even BO cosmopolite a being as man may demand more than two centuries and a quarter before he can entirely accommodate his constitution to such altered circumstances, and before the succes sive generations of parents can acquire themselves, and transmit to their offspring, the new and requisite physiological peculiarities. English travelers often ascribe the more delicate health of the inhabitants here to their in-door habits and want of exercise. But it is natural that they should shrink from exposing them selves to the severe frosts and long-continued snows of winter, and to the intense heat of the summer's sun. An Englishman is usually recognized at once in a party, by a more robust look, and greater clearness and ruddiness of complexion ; and it is surprising how distinguishable he is even from persons born of English parents in the United States. It is also a curious fact, which seems generally admitted, that the native Anglo-Austra lians bear a considerable resemblance to the Anglo-Americans in look and manner of speaking, which is a mystery, for there is certainly in that case no analogy between the climates of the two countries. ^The number of persons in Boston who have earned in business, or have inherited large fortunes, is very great. The Common, a small park, which is by no means the only quarter frequented by rich citizens, is surrounded by houses which might form two fine squares in London, and the average value of which^in the market, might bear a comparison with those in very fashionable parts of our metropolis — sums of from 4000Z. to 20,000/. ster ling having been paid for them. The greater part of these buildings are the property of the persons who reside in them ; and they are fitted up very elegantly, and often expensively. fEntertainments in a sumptuous style are not rare ; but the small number of servants in comparison with those kept in England by CHAP. IX.] STYLE OF LIVING.— SERVANTS. 125 persons of corresponding income, and the want of an equipage, impart to their mode of life an appearance of simplicity which is perhaps more the result of necessity than of deference to a republican theory of equalitjjj For to keep servants here for mere show, would not only be thought absurd, but would be a great sacrifice of comfort. To obtain a few efficient ones at any price, and to put up with many inconveniences rather than part with them — allowing them to continue in service after marriage, is the practice of not a few of the richest people, who often keep no more than four domestics where there would be at least nine in London.^ In consequence of this state of things, the ladies are more independent of being waited on than those of similar fortune in England ; but we are sometimes amused when we hear them express envy of the superior advantages enjoyed in Europe, for they are under the delusion of supposing that large establish ments give no trouble in " the old country." There are, indeed, crowds of poor emigrants here, especially from Ireland, eager for employment ; but for the most part so coarse, ignorant, and dirty in their habits, that they can not gain admittance into genteel houses. No mistress here ventures to interfere with the dress of a servant maid, and girls wait at table with braided hair, which is certainly more becoming to them when young, and are never required to conceal with a cap their neatly arranged locks, according to the costume approved of by English disciplinarians. When raising the dust at their work, in sweeping the floors, they cover the head with a handkerchief. The New England servants are generally provident, for, besides the intelligence they derive from their early school education, they have a reasonable hope of bettering their condition, are well paid, and not kept >,,- down in the world by a number of poor relations. (Many of the wealthiest families keep no carriage, for, as I before said, no one affects to live in style, and the trouble of engaging a good coachman and groom would be considerable, and also because the distances in Boston are small, and the facilities of traveling by railway into the country in all directions very great. But there are many livery stables, where excellent carriages and horses are to be hired with well-dressed drivers. 126 EDUCATION OF LADIES. [CHAP. IX. Some of their vehicles are fitted up with India-rubber tubes, to enable those inside to communicate with the coachman without letting down the glass, which, during a severe New England frost, or a snow storm, must be no unmeaning luxury. They who can not afford to live in the metropolis, reside with their families at places often twenty-five miles distant, such as Ipswich, and go into their shops and counting-houses every morn ing, paying 100 dollars (or twenty guineas), for an annual ticket on the railway, and being less than an hour at a time on the road. The usual hours of breakfasting and dining here are much earlier than in London ; yet evening parties in the most fashionable society do not begin till nine, and often ten o'clock, which appears a senseless imitation of foreign manners, and calculated, if not intended, to draw a line between those who can afford to turn night into day. and those who can not. In some houses the gentlemen go up after dinner with the ladies, as in France, to the drawing-room ; but it is more com mon, as in England, to stay a while and talk together. There is very little drinking, and I scarcely ever heard any conversation in which the women might not have joined with propriety. Bachelor dinners are more frequent than in the highest circles in London ; but there is beginning to be a change in this respect, and certainly the ladies are well able to play their part, for no care or expense is spared to give them, not only every female accomplishment, but a solid education. The incomes made by some men of superior scholarship and general knowledge, who devote themselves entirely to the teaching of young ladies, and, still more, the station held by these teachers in society, is a char acteristic of Boston highly deserving of praise and imitation. The influence of cultivated women in elevating and refining the tone of society and the national mind, may nowhere be ren dered more effective than where a large proportion of the men are engaged in mercantile business, and belong to a class who have too truly been said " to live in counting-houses that they may sleep in palaces." Their wives and daughters have leisure to acquire literary and scientific tastes, and to improve their CHAP. IX.] MARRIAGES. 127 understandings, while the fathers, husbands, and brothers are summing up accounts, attending to the minute details of business, or driving bargains. The impress of the strict morals of the Puritan founders of the New England commonwealths on the manners of their descend ants, is still very marked. Swearing is seldom heard, and duel ing has been successfully discountenanced, although they are in constant communication with the southern states, where both these practices are common, though much less so than formerly. The facility of getting on in the world, and marrying young, is, upon the whole, most favorable to the morals of the commu nity, although it sometimes leads to uncongenial and unhappy unions. But, as a set-off to this evil, it should be stated, that nowhere is there so much free choice in forming matrimonial connections without regard to equality of fortune. It is un avoidable that the aristocracy of taste, manners, and education should create barriers, which can not be set at naught without violence to the feelings ; but we had good opportunities of know ing that parents would be thought far more unreasonable here than in England, and in some other states of the Union, if they discouraged alliances on the mere ground of one of the parties being without fortune. The most eminent medical men in Boston make, I am told, about 9500 dollars (2000/.) a year, and their early career is one of hard striving and small profits. The incomes made by the first lawyers are much more considerable, and I hear that, when a leading practitioner was invited to transfer his business from Boston to New York, because he might be employed there by a population of 400,000 souls, he declined, saying, that his clients were drawn from a population nearly equal in numbers and ave rage wealth, although not a fourth part of them were resident in the city of Boston. Bankruptcies are rarer than in any other mercantile community in the Union of equal extent, and, when they do occur, larger dividends are paid to the creditor. As most of the rich private citizens live within their income, so the State is frugal, and al though its credit stands so high that it could borrow largely, it 128 PROTECTIONIST DOCTRINES. [CHAP. IX has contracted very little debt, it being thought advisable to leave the execution of almost every kind of public work to pri vate enterprise and capital. In many of the southern and western states, the commercial policy of Massachusetts was represented to me as eminently selfish, the great capitalists wishing to monopolize the manufac turing trade, and by a high tariff to exclude foreign capitalists, so as to grow rich at the expense of other parts of the Union. In conversing with the New Englanders, I became satisfied that, in spite of the writings of the first political economists in Europe and America, and the opinion of Channing, and some other of their own distinguished men (not excepting Daniel Webster him self in the early part of his career), they have persuaded them selves that the doctrines of free trade are not applicable to the present state of their country. The facility with which every people conscientiously accommodate their speculative opinions to their local and individual interests, is sufficiently demonstrated by the fact, that each of the other states, and sections of states, as they successively embark in the manufacture, whether of cot ton, iron, or other articles, become immediately converts to pro tectionist views, against which they had previously declaimed. There is a general feeling of self-respect pervading all classes in the New England states, which enables those who rise in the world, whether in political life, or by suddenly making large for tunes in trade, if they have true gentility of feeling, to take their place in good society easily and naturally. Their power of ac commodating themselves to their new position is greatly facilitated by the instruction imparted in the free schools to all, however humble in station, so that they are rarely in danger of betraying their low origin by ungrammatical phrases and faulty pronun ciation. English critics are in the habit of making no allowance for the slightest variations in language, pronunciation, or manners, in any people descended from the Anglican stock. In the Ger mans or French they may think a deviation from the British standard odd or ridiculous, but in an American they set it down at once as vulgar ; whereas it may be one of those conventional- CHAP. IX.] PECULIARITIES OF LANGUAGE. 129 isms, respecting which every nation has a right to enforce its own. arbitrary rules. The frequent use of the words, " sir" and " ma'am," in the United States, like " oui, monsieur, oui, ma- dame," in France, for the sake of softening the bald and abrupt " yes" or "no," would sound to a Frenchman or Italian more polite ; and if the Americans were to conform to the present English model in such trifles, it might happen that in England itself the fashion may soon change. There are also many gen uine old classical phrases, which have grown obsolete in the parent country, and which the Americans retain, and ought not to allow themselves to be laughed out of. The title of Madam is sometimes given here, and generally in Charleston (S. Carolina), and in the South, to a mother whose son has married, and the daughter-in-law is then called Mrs. By this means they avoid the inelegant phraseology of old Mrs. A., or the Scotch, Mrs. A. senior. Madam, in short, very commonly serves as the equiva lent of dowager, as used in English titled families. There are also some antique provincialisms handed down from the times of the first settlers, which may -well deserve to be kept up, although they may be subjects of diversion to English tourists. In one of Shirley's plays, written just before the middle of the seven teenth century, when the largest emigration took place from Old to New England, we find the term, " I guess," for "I think," or " I suppose," occurring frequently ; and if we look farther back, it is. met with in the " Miller's Tale" and in the " Monk" of Chaucer : — ..." For little heaviness Is right enough for rauchel folk, I guess." And in Spenser's " Faerie Queene" — "It seemed a second Paradise, I guesse."* Among the most common singularities of expression are the following : — " I should admire to see him" for "I should like to see him ;" "I want to know," and " Do tell," both exclamations of surprise, answering to our " Dear me." These last, how ever, are rarely heard in society above the middling class. Ocea- * Canto x. 23. F* 130 LITERARY TASTES. [CHAP. IX. sionally I was as much puzzled as if I was reading Tarn o'Shanter, as, for example, " out of kittel" means " out of order." The word " sick" is used in New England in the same sense as it was in the time of Shakspeare, or when the liturgy of the Church of England was composed. The word " ill," which in Great Britain means "not well," signifies in America "very ill." They often speak here of a " lovely man," using the adjective in a moral sense ; and say of a plain, shriveled old woman, that she is " a fine and lovely woman," meaning that her character and disposition are amiable. " Clever" is applied to a good- natured and good-hearted person who is without talent and quickness. At first we had many a good laugh when we dis covered that we had been at cross purposes, on comparing notes as to our opinions of English and American friends. On one occasion I admitted that Mrs. A. might be " a fine and lovely woman," but it could only be said of her by candlelight. In the literary circles here we meet with several writers who are keeping up an active correspondence with distinguished men in all parts of Europe, but especially with English authors. We are often amused to observe how much the conversation turns on what is going on in London. One day I was asked whether it were true that the committee for deciding on the statues to be set up in the new House of Lords, had voted in favor of Richardson, before they could make up their minds whether they should honor Pope, Dryderi, Swift, and Fielding; and whether Milton was at first black-balled, and how they could possibly be disputing about the rival claims of Hume and Robert son as historians, while a greater than either of them, Gibbon, was left out of the question. They suggested that a tribunal of literary Jews might soon be required to pronounce fairly on the merits of Christian writers. " Do your countrymen," said one of my friends to me, "mean to imitate the spirit of the king of Bavaria, who excluded Luther from his Walhalla because he was a Protestant, and instead of Shakspeare and Newton could endure no representatives of British genius, save the orthodox King Alfred and Roger Bacon ?" I was curious, when I got home, to learn how much of this gossip about things in the old CHAP. IX.] COST OF LIVING. 131 country was founded on correct information, and was relieved to find that the six poets ultimately selected were Chaucer, Spenser, Shakspeare, Milton, Dryden, and Pope ; a result which, consid ering that a single black ball excluded, did credit to the umpires, and would, I am sure, be approved of by a literary jury in Massachusetts. I was also glad to learn that in Bavaria, as soon as political parties changed, a royal order was issued to admit the bust of Luther into the Walhalla. The Americans, in general, have more self-possession and self- confidence than Englishmen, although this characteristic belongs perhaps less to the Bostonians than to the citizens of most of the other parts of the Union. On the other hand, the members of the great republic are sensitive and touchy about their country, a point on which the English are imperturbably indifferent, being proud of every thing British, even to a fault, since con tempt for the opinion of other nations may be carried so far as to diminish the prospect of national improvement. It might be better if each of the great branches of the Anglo-Saxon family would borrow something from the qualities of the other, — if John Bull had less mauvais honte, so as to care less for what others were thinking of himself individually, and if Jonathan cared less for what others are thinking of his country. The expense of living in the northern states is, upon the whole, decidedly more reasonable than in England, although the dress, both of men and women, is somewhat dearer. In Boston, also, the rent of houses is very high, but not so in the country. Traveling is much cheaper, and so are food, newspapers, and books. On comparing the average price of bread during the pre sent year with that in England, we find that it is about twenty- five per cent, cheaper, beef and mutton ten per cent, cheaper, and the price of poultry extremely moderate. Why, in so old a city as Boston, the supply of seamstresses, milliners, and dressmakers, should be as inadequate to the demand as in some of our newly- founded colonies when most progressive, I leave to political economists to explain. My wife was desirous of having a dress and bonnet made up in a week, but one milliner after another declined to undertake the task. It would be a useful lesson to 132 ALARMS OF FIRE. [CHAP. IX those who are accustomed to consider themselves as patrons whenever they engage others to do work for them, to learn how in reality, if things are in a healthy state, the obligation is mutual ; but to discover that the usual relations of the employer and employed are entirely reversed, and that the favor is by no means conferred by the purchaser, would try the patience of most travelers. Friends interceded, but in vain ; till, at last, a repre sentation was made to one of these important personages, that my wife was about to leave the city on a fixed day, and that being a foreigner she ought, out of courtesy, to be assisted ; an appeal which was successful, and the work was then undertaken and sent home with strict punctuality, neatly made, and every spare scrap of the material honestly returned, the charge being about equal to that of the first London dressmakers. We remarked in some of the country towns of Massachusetts, where the income of the family was very moderate, that the young ladies indulged in extravagant dressing — 40/., for example, being paid for a shawl in one instance. Some of the richer class, who had returned from passing a year or two in Germany and England, had been much struck with the economical habits, in dress and in the luxuries of the table, of persons in easy circum stances there, and the example had not been lost on them. Oct. 2 8 . — Night after night the church bells have been tolling the alarm of fire, followed by the rattling of the heavy engines under the windows of our hotel. When I last resided here (1842), I was told that half of these conflagrations were caused by incendiaries, partly by boys for the mere love of mischief; but no suspicions of this kind are now entertained. Most of the buildings are of wood, and it is hoped that the increasing use of brick in the private, and of granite in the public, buildings will lessen the evil. The combustibility of the wood of the white or Weymouth pine {Pinus strobusj, largely employed in houses here, is said to exceed that of other kinds of timber. CHAPTER X. Boston. — Blind Asylum and Laura Bridgeman. — Respect for Freedom of Conscience. — Cemetery of Mount Auburn. — Channing's Cenotaph. — Episcopal Churches. — Unitarian Congregations. — Eminent Preachers. — Progress of Unitarians why slow. — Their Works reprinted in England. — Nothingarians. — Episcopalian Asceticism. — Separation of Religion and Politics. DURING our stay at Boston we visited the Perkins' Institution, or Asylum for the Blind, and found Laura Bridgman, the girl who has been blind, deaf and dumb from infancy, much grown since we saw her four years ago. She is now sixteen, and looks very intelligent. She was reading when we entered, and we were told that formerly, when so engaged and alone, she used to make with one hand the signs of all the words which she felt out with the other, just as an illiterate beginner speaks aloud each sentence as he spells it. ' But the process of conveying the meaning of the words to her mind is now far too rapid for such delay, and the hand not occupied in reading remains motionless. We were afterward delighted to watch her while she was following the conversation of two other dumb children who were using the modern single-hand alphabet. She was able to comprehend all the ideas they were exchanging, and to overhear, as it were, every word they said, by making her fingers play, with fairy lightness, over theirs, with so slight a touch, as not in the least degree to interfere with the freedom of their motions. We saw her afterward talk with Dr. Howe, with great rapidity and animation, pointing out accurately the places on a map while he gave a lesson in geography. She indulged her curiosity in exam ining my wife's dress, and, taking her hand, told her which was her wedding ring, and then began to teach her the deaf and dumb alphabet. She is always aware whether it is a lady's hand she touches, and. is shy toward a stranger of the other sex. As she is now in communication with no less than a hundred acquaintances, she has grown much more like other children than formerly. 134 BLIND ASYLUM. [CHAP. X. We learnt from Dr. Howe that the task of carrying on her education has become more and more arduous, for she is naturally clever, and her reflective powers have unavoidably ripened much faster than the perceptive ; so that at an age when other children would be satisfied to accumulate facts by the use of their eyes, her chief curiosity is directed to know the causes of things. In reading history, for example, where there is usually a continued description of wTars and battles, she must be told the motives for which men slaughter each other, and is so distressed at their wickedness, that she can scarcely be induced to pursue the study. To be able to appreciate justly the judicious treatment of those to whose training she owes her wonderful progress, it would be necessary to be practically acquainted with the disappointments of persons who undertake to teach pupils who are simply blind, and not suffering, like Laura, under the double privation of the senses of sight arid hearing. Great pains had been taken to make one of the boys, whom we saw, have a correct idea of a horse , he had got by rote a long list of characteristics, and had felt the animal, and the mortification of the master may be conceived on discovering that after all the child could not be sure whether the creature had three, four, or five legs. After a few days' intercourse with the blind, we no longer marvel that precocious children, who begin to read early and get by heart and recite long poems, or become knowing by keeping company with grown-up people, are so often overtaken or left behind by those who have been neglected, and have spent their time at play. For when the truants are sup posed to be most idle, they may, in reality, be storing their minds with a multitude of facts, to give a detailed description of which to a student, in or out of a blind asylum, would fill volumes. Dr. Howe told us of a blind Frenchman in the establishment, who could guess the age of strangers, by hearing their voices, much more accurately than he and others who could see as well as talk with them. On looking over the annual reports of the trustees, I observed that on Sunday the pupils, about a hundred in number, and CHAP. X.] CEMETERY OF MOUNT AUBURN. 135 belonging to various sects, attend public worship in several different churches, they themselves, or their parents, choosing some particular church. " Many of them," says the report, "attend Sabbath schools, and, as care is taken to exclude sect arian doctrines from the regular course of instruction, the opinions of the pupils respecting doctrinal matters in religion are formed upon the basis prescribed by the parents." The assurance here given to the public is characteristic of a settled purpose, every where displayed by the New Englanders, to prevent their charitable bequests, as well as their great educa tional establishments, from becoming instruments of proselytizing, or serving as bribes, to tempt parents, pupils, or the poor to renounce any part of their hereditary creed for the sake of world ly advantages. Such conduct, implying great delicacy of feeling in matters of conscience, and a profound respect for the sacredness of religious obligations, is worthy of the descendants of men who went into exile, and braved the wilderness and the Indian tom ahawk, rather than conform outwardly to creeds and rituals of which they disapproved. Oct. 29. — Went to Cambridge to visit the cemetery of Mount Auburn, where a large extent of wild, unreclaimed, hilly ground, covered with oak and pine, has been inclosed for a public burial- place. From the highest eminence there is a fine view of the surrounding country. Since I was here in 1842, a chapel has been erected of granite, in the Gothic style, and in good taste, with painted glass from Edinburgh in the windows, and a hand some entrance gate. The chapel is to serve as a Westminster Abbey, Pantheon, or Walhalla, to contain statues, busts, and monuments of distinguished men. A cenotaph has been placed in the grounds in honor of Dr. Channing, with an inscription written by a friend, in a plain, unambitious style, such as Chan ning himself would have wished. I rejoiced to hear that as his funeral procession was passing through the streets of Boston, the bell of the Roman Catholic chapel was tolled among the rest, and I recollected with pleasure the conversations I had had with him in 1841. They who witness the impulse given by him to the cause of popular education, the increasing liberality of 136 EPISCOPAL CHURCHES. [CHAP. X sentiment in New England on matters of religion, and the great popularity of his works, might desire to inscribe on his tomb — " E'en in his ashes live their wonted fires." Some of the Episcopal churches in Boston are conducted on the high, and others on the low church model ; and the Tracta- rian movement has had the effect here, as in England, not of establishing uniformity by a strict adherence to one rubric, but of producing a much greater variety than formerly in the man ner of performing public worship. If, besides striking out the Athanasian Creed, the American Episcopal Church had omitted the Nicene Creed, as they first proposed in 1785, and had con densed and abridged the Thirty-nine Articles to twenty, measures from which they were dissuaded by the English hierarchy, from whose hands their first bishops required consecration, a schism might probably have taken place when the Tractarian movement occurred, and they might have separated into two churches far more distinct than that of the Drummondites and their opponents, or the partisans of the Scotch and English rubric north of the Tweed. In the Stone, or King's Chapel, the English liturgy is used, with such omissions and alterations as are required to suit the opinions of Unitarians, for that chapel was transferred from the Anglican to the Unitarian Church by the conversion of the minister and majority of the pew-holders. But in almost all the other Unitarian churches, the service resembles in form that of the established church of Scotland. Before my £rst visit to Boston, I had been led to believe that the majority of the citizens were Unitarians ; whereas I found, on inquiry, that although they may exceed in number any other single sect, and comprise not a few of the richest citizens, they do not constitute above one-fifth of the whole population, and scarcely more than a tenth in Massachusetts generally. There is, however, another sect, calling themselves Christians (pronounced Christians), pre vailing largely in New England, which denies the doctrine of the Trinity, and I am told that many who worship in other " orthodox" congregations are heterodox on this point, although they do not choose to become separatists. One of them observed CHAP. X.] UNITARIAN CONGREGATIONS. 137 to me that he thought it nearly as presumptuous to acquiesce in. the negative as in the affirmative of the propositions laid down on this subject in the Athanasian Creed. " We are," he said, " like children born blind, disputing about colors." The prominent position occupied by the Unitarians arises, not from their number, nor their wealth, however considerable this may be, but from their talent, earnestness, and knowledge. Many of the leading minds in the Union belong to this sect, and among them, Channing, Sparks, Dewey, and other well-known authors, have been converts from the Congregationalists. To have no creed, no standard to rally round, no fixed canons of interpretation of Scripture, is said to be fatal to their progress. Yet one of their body remarked to me that they might be well satisfied that they were gaining ground, when it could be said that in the last thirty years (since 1815) the number of their ministers had increased in a tenfold ratio, or from fifty to five hundred, whereas the population had only doubled in twenty-five years. He also reminded me that their ranks are scarcely ever recruited from foreign emigrants, from whom the Romanists, Presbyterians, Methodists, Baptists, and Episcopalians annually draw large accessions. A more kindly feeling has of late years sprung up between the Unitarians and Congregationalists, because some of the most eminent writers of both sects have joined in defending themselves against a common adversary, namely, those rationalists who go so far as to deny the historical evidence of the miracles related in the New Testament, and who, in some other points, depart more widely from the Unitarian standard, than does the latter from that of Rome itself. Norton, author of " The Genuineness of the Gospels" may be mentioned, as one of the celebrated Unitarian divines who has extorted from the more liberal members of all " orthodox" denominations the praise of being a defender of the faith. In the course of my two visits to the United States, I enjoyed opportunities of hearing sermons preached by many of the most eminent Unitarians — among them were Channing, Henry Ware, Dewey, Bellows, Putnam, and Gannet — and was much struck, not only with their good sense and erudition, but with the fervor 138 EMINENT PREACHERS— CHANNING'S WORKS. [CHAP. X. of their eloquence. I had been given to understand that I should find a want of warmth in their discourses, that they were too cold and philosophical, and wanting in devotional feeling ; but, on the contrary, there were many of them most impressive, full of earnestness and zeal, as well as of original views and instruction. One of the chief characteristics was the rare allu sion made to the Old Testament, or to controverted points of doctrine, or to the mysteries of the Christian religion, and the frequency with which they dwelt 011 the moral precepts and practical lessons of the Gospels, especially the preaching of Christ himself. Occasional exhortations to the faithful, cheer fully to endure obloquy for the sake of truth, and to pay no court to popularity, an undue craving for which was, they said, the bane of a democracy, convinced me how much the idea of their standing in a hostile position to a large numerical majority of the community was present to their minds. On some occasions, however, reference was naturally made to doctrinal points, par ticularly to the humanity of Christ, his kindred nature, and its distinctness from that of the eternal, omnipotent, and incorporeal Spirit which framed the universe ; but chiefly on occasions when the orator was desirous of awakening in the hearts of his hearers emotions of tenderness, pity, gratitude, and love, by dwelling on the bodily sufferings of the Redeemer on the cross. More than once have I seen these appeals produce so deep a sensation, as to move a highly educated audience to tears ; and I came away assured that they who imagine this form of Christianity to be essentially cold, lifeless, and incapable of reaching the heart, or of powerfully influencing the conduct of men, can never have enjoyed opportunities of listening to their most gifted preachers, or had a large personal intercourse with the members of the sect. When I wished to purchase a copy of the writings of Chan- ning arid of Dewey in Boston, I was told that I could obtain more complete and cheaper editions in London than in the Unit ed States ; a proof, not only how much they are read in England, but that the pecuniary interests of British authors are not the only ones which suffer by the want of an international copyright. On inquiring of the publishers at Boston, as to the extent of the CHAP. X.] NOTHINGARIANS. 139 sale of Channing's works in the United States, I was informed that several of them, published separately, had gone through many editions, and no less than 9000 copies of the whole, in six volumes, had been sold already (1845), and the demand for them was on the increase, many copies having been recently ordered from distant places in the West, such as St. Louis and Chicago. A reprint of the same edition at Glasgow, has circulated widely in England, and the reading of it in America is by no means confined to Unitarians, the divines of other denominations, especially the Calvinists, being desirous to know what has been written against them by their great antagonist. Having been informed by one of my friends that about a fifth of all the New Eriglanders were " Nothingarians," I tried, but with little success, to discover the strict meaning of the term. Nothing seems more vague and indefinite than the mariner of its application. I fancied at first that it might signify deists or in fidels, or persons careless about any religious faith, or who were not church-goers ; but, although it may sometimes signify one or all of these, I found it was usually quite otherwise. The term latitudinarian, used in a good sense, appeared most commonly to convey the meaning ; for a Nothingarian, I was informed, was indifferent whether he attended a Baptist, Methodist, Presbyte rian, or Congregationalist church, and was often equally inclined to contribute money liberally to any one or all of them. A Meth odist writer of some eminence remarked to me, that the range of doctrines embraced by these denominations, was not greater, if so great, as that which comprehended within the same pale a high tractarian and a low churchman, and that he who would indiffer ently subscribe to these two forms of Episcopalianism, might with equal propriety be styled a Nothingarian. In other cases I as~ certained that the term Nothingarian was simply used for persons who, though they attended worship regularly in some church, had never been communicants. One of the latter, an Episcopalian, once said to me, " I have never joined any church ;" and then in explanation added, " it would be hard at my age to renounce society, dancing, and public amusements." I expostulated soon afterward with an Episcopalian minister in Virginia, observing- 140 RELIGION AND POLITICS. [CHAP. X. that such ideas of austerity and asceticism were not consistent with the spirit of the Anglican Church. This he admitted, but pleaded the absolute necessity of extreme strictness to enable them to efface the stigma transmitted to them from colonial times ; for in the Southern states, particularly in Virginia, the patronage of the mother country, in filling up livings, was for a century scan dalously abused, and so many young men of profligate and im moral habits were sent out, as to create a strong prejudice against the Established Church of England in the minds of the more zealous and sincere religionists. On one of my voyages home from America, an officer of rank in the British army lamented that the governor of one of our col onies had lately appointed as Attorney-General one who was an atheist. T told him I knew the lawyer in question to be a zeal ous Baptist. " Yes," he replied, " Baptist, Atheist, or something of that sort." I have no doubt that if this gallant colonel should visit New England, his estimate of the proportion of Nothinga rians in the population would be very liberal. Traveling as I did in 1845—6, through a large part of the Union, immediately after the close of the protracted contest for the Presidency, when the votes in favor of Mr. Clay and Mr. Polk had been nearly balanced, I was surprised to find in the north, south, and west, how few of the Americans with whom I conversed as traveling companions, could tell me to what denom ination of Christians these two gentlemen belonged. I at length ascertained that one of them was an Episcopalian, and the other a Presbyterian. This ignorance could by no means be set down to indifFerentism. Had one of the candidates been a man of im moral character, it would have materially affected his chance of success, or probably if he had been suspected of indifference about religion, and not a few of the politicians whom I questioned were strongly imbued with sectarian feelings ; but it was clear that in the choice of a first magistrate their minds had been wholly oc cupied with other considerations, and the separation of religion and politics, though far from being as complete as might be wished, is certainly one of the healthy features of the working of the American institutions CHAPTER XI. Boston. — Whig Caucus. — Speech of Mr. Webster. — Politics in Massachu setts. — Election of Governor and Representatives. — Thanksgiving Day and Governor's Proclamation. — Absence of Pauperism. — Irish Repeal Meeting. — New England Sympathizer. — Visit to a Free School. — State Education. — Pay and Social Rank of Teachers. — Importance of the Pro fession. — Rapid Progress and Effects of Educational Movement. — Popu lar Lectures. — Lending Libraries. Nov. 10, 1845. — WENT to a great meeting of about 3500 people in Faneuil Hall, where they were discussing the election of the governor and executive officers of the State. It was called a Whig caucus, being only attended by persons of one political party, or if others were present, they were there only by courtesy, and expected to be silent, and not interrupt the harmony of the proceedings. When I entered, I found Mr. Daniel Webster on his legs. Since the arrival of the last mail steamer from Liver pool fears had been entertained that the pretensions of the Cabi net of Washington to the whole, or greater part of Oregon, must end in a war between England and the United States. This topic was therefore naturally uppermost in the minds of a peace- loving and commercial community.. The cautious and measured expressions of the Whig statesman when out of office, and his evident sense of the serious responsibility incurred by one who should involve two great nations in war, formed a striking con trast to the unguarded tone of the late inaugural address of the President of the Union on the same subject. I was amused to hear frequent references made to the recent debate in the British House of Commons, the exact words of Sir Robert Peel and others being quoted and commented upon, just as if the discussion had been simply adjourned from Westminster to Boston. The orator rebuked the blustering tone of defiance, in which dema gogues and newspapers in some parts of the Union were indulg ing against England. He then condemned the new constitution 142 POLITICS IN MASSACHUSETTS. [CHAP. XI. of Texas, which prohibits the Legislature from ever setting the bondman free, and deprecated the diversion made from the ranks of the Whigs by the Abolitionists, who, by setting up a candi date of their own for the Presidentship, had enabled their oppo nents to carry a man pledged to the annexation of Texas. At the same time he gave this party the credit of being as conscien tious as they were impracticable. He then alluded to another " separate organization," as it is here called, namely, that of the " Native Americans," which had in like manner defeated the object they had in view, by dividing the Whigs, the majority of whom agreed in thinking the present naturalization laws very defective, and that a stop should be put to fraudulent voting. The introduction of a long Latin quotation from Cicero showed that the speaker reckoned on having a considerable number at least of well-educated men in his large audience. The frequent mention of the name of Governor George N. Briggs, the initial letter only of the second appellative being pronounced, grated strangely on my English ear ; for though we do not trouble our selves to learn all the Christian names of our best actors, as Mr. T. P. Cooke and Miss M. Tree, we are never so laconic and unceremonious in dealing with eminent public men. I had asked several persons what K. signified in the name of the President, James K. Polk, before T ascertained that it meant Knox ; but, in the United States, it might have no other signification than the letter K. ; for, when first in Boston, I requested a friend to tell me -what B. stood for in his name, and he replied, " For nothing ; my surname was so common a one, that letters ad dressed to me were often mis-sent, so I got the Post-Office to allow me to adopt the letter B." I came away from this and other public meetings convinced that the style of speaking of Mr. Webster, Mr. Everett, Mr. Win- throp, arid some others, would take greatly in England, both in and out of parliament. It was also satisfactory to reflect, that in Massachusetts, where the whole population is more educated than elsewhere, arid more Anglo-American, having less of recent foreign admixture, whether European or African, the dominant party is against the extension of slavery to new regions like Texas, CHAP. XL] ELECTION. 143 against territorial aggrandizement, whether in the north or south, and against war. They are in a minority it is true : but each state in the Union has such a separate and independent position, that, like a distinct nation, it can continue to cherish its own principles and institutions, and set an example to the rest, which they may in time learn to imitate. The Whigs were originally in favor of more centralization, or of giving increased power to the federal executive, while the democratic party did all they could to weaken the central power, and successfully contended for the sovereign rights and privileges of each member of the confed eration. In so doing they have perhaps inadvertently, and with out seeing the bearing of their policy, guarded the older and more advanced commonwealths from being too much controlled and kept down by the ascendency of newer and ruder states. A few days later, I went to see the electors give their votes. Perfect order and good-humor prevailed, although the contest was a keen one. As I approached the poll, the agents of differ ent committees, supposing that I might be an elector, put into my hands printed lists, containing the names of all the candidates for the offices of Governor, Lieutenant-governor, five senators, and thirty-five representatives. Every registered voter is entitled to put one of these " tickets" into the balloting box. The real struggle was between the Whigs and Democrats, the former of whom carried the day ; but, besides their tickets, two others were presented to me, one called the Native American, and the other the Working Man's ticket. The latter had for its emblem a naked arm, wielding a hammer, and for its motto, " The strong right arm of labor." The five senators proposed in this list, consisted of two printers, a carpenter, a blacksmith, and a sur veyor, and among the representatives were four shoemakers, one tailor, eight carpenters, four printers, an engineer, &c. I heard Americans regret, that besides caucuses there are no public meetings here where matters are debated by persons of opposite parties and opinions, such as are sometimes held in En gland. I was surprised to hear that such experiments were of rare occurrence in a country where men opposed in politics frequently argue with so much good temper, and where, in so 144 THANKSGIVING DAY. [CHAP. XI. many hotels and taverns, newspapers of all shades of opinion are taken in just as in our great club-houses in London, affording opportunities of knowing what can be said on all sides of every question. I have since learnt from correspondents, that, in a period of political excitement, the people in many parts of Massa chusetts have begun to engage different lecturers to explain to them the opposite facts, views, and arguments adduced for and against the chief subjects under discussion. Nov. 27. — This day, Thanksgiving Day, and the 4th of July, Independence Day, are the only two holidays in the American calendar. The Governor has, they say, as usual, made a bad guess in regard to weather, for there is a pelting rain. It was indeed ascertained by actual measurement at Cambridge, that in nineteen hours between yesterday evening and to-day, at four o'clock, there has fallen no less than four and a half inches of rain, or one-eighth part of the average of the whole year, which amounts to thirty-six inches at Boston. By this unlucky accident many a family gathering has been interrupted, and relatives have been unable to come in from the country to join a merry meeting, corresponding to that of an English Christmas Day. Many a sermon, also, carefully prepared for the occasion, has been preached to empty pews ; but the newspapers inform us, that some of these effusions will be repeated on Sunday next. Sixteen states have now adopted this New England custom of appointing a day for thanksgiving, and it is spreading fast, having already reached South Carolina, and even Louisiana. A month before, I had heard with interest the Governor's proclamation, read in all the churches, full of good feeling and good sense. He called on the people of the state, now that the harvest was gathered in, to praise the God of Heaven for his bounties, and in their cheerful family circles to render to Him a tribute of thanksgiving for His goodness : — " Let us praise Him, that, under His protecting Providence, the institu tions of state, of religion, of learning and education, established by the prudence and wisdom of our fathers, under which their children have been prosperous and happy, have come down to us unimpaired and in full vigor : " That the various classes of our citizens, under the mild and equal CHAP. XL] ABSENCE OF PAUPERISM. 145 government of laws made by themselves, pursue, unmolested, upon the land and upon the sea, their peaceful occupations : " That although we have heard the distant rumor, and seen the prepar ations for war our common country is yet at peace with the world." In no part of the address was any claim set up to the peculiar favor of God, or his special intervention in chastising the nation for particular transgressions ; nothing to imply that He does not govern the world by fixed and general laws, moral and physical, which it is our duty to study and obey, and which, if we disobey, whether from ignorance or willfulness, will often be made the instruments of our punishment even in this world. The procla mation concluded thus, in the good old style : £: Given at the Council Chamber, in Boston, this 1st day of October, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and forty-five, and of the Independence of the United States the seventieth. " GEORGE N. BRIGGS. "By his Excellency the Governor, with the advice and consent of the Council- " JOHN G. PALFREY, Secretary. " God save the Commonwealth of Massachusetts." The almost entire absence of pauperism even in the large towns, except among the old and infirm, forms a striking point of contrast between, the state of things in New England and in Europe. One of my friends, who is serving on a committee in Boston to see that the poor who are too old to work have all necessary comforts, has just ordered, as one of the indispensables, a carpet for the bed-side of an old woman. Yet, within five miles of Boston, some of the newly arrived emigrants of the lower class of Irish, may now be seen living in mud huts by the side of railway cuttings, which they are employed to dig, who are regarded by many of the native-born laborers with no small dis gust, not only as the most ignorant and superstitious of mortals, but as likely, by their competition, to bring down the general standard of wages. The rich capitalists, on the other hand, confess to me, that they know not how they could get on with the construction of public works, and obtain good interest for their money, were they deprived of this constant influx of foreign labo . VOL. i. — G 146 IRISH REPEAL MEETING. [CHAP. XI. They speak also with kindness of the Irish, saying they are most willing to work hard, keep their temperance vows, and, in spite of the considerable sums drawn from them by the Catholic priests, are putting by largely out of their earnings into the Savings Banks. It is also agreed that they are most generous to their poor relations in Ireland, remitting money to them annually, and sometimes enough to enable them to pay their passage across the Atlantic. At the same time they confess, with much con cern, that the efforts now making by the people at large, aided by the wealthiest class, to establish a good system of state instruction, and to raise the moral and intellectual character of the millions, must be retarded by the intrusion of so many rude and ignorant settlers. Among other mischiefs, the political passions and party feelings of a foreign country are intruded into the political arena, and a tempting field laid open to demagogues of the lowest order. Returning home one night after dark from a party, I heard music in a large public building, and, being told it was a repeal meeting held by the Irish, had the curiosity to look in. After a piece of instrumental music had been performed, an orator, with an Irish accent, addressed the crowd on the sufferings of the Irish people precisely as if he had forgotten on which side of the Atlantic he then was. He dwelt on the tyranny of the Saxons, and spoke of repeal as the only means of emancipating their country from British domination, and solicited money in aid of the great cause. Seeing, with no small surprise, an industrious native-born artisan of Boston, whom I knew, in the crowd, I asked him, as we went out together, whether he approved of the objects of the meeting. He belonged to the extreme democratic party, and answered, very coolly and quite seriously, " We hope that we may one day be able to do for Ireland what France did for the United States in our great struggle for independence." On my return home, I found that my pocket had been picked of a purse containing fortunately a few dollars only, an accident for which I got no commiseration, as my friends hoped it would be a lesson to me to keep better company in future. That a humble mechanic of Boston should be found who CHAP. XL] VISIT TO A FREE SCHOOL. 147 indulged in wild projects for redressing the wrongs of the Hiber nian race, ought not to create wonder, when I state that before the end of the year 1845, a resolution was moved in Congress, by Mr. M'Connell, one of the members for Alabama, after he had been talking much about the spirit of Christian love and peaceful brotherhood which distinguished the American republic, to the following effect : — " That the Irish, ground down by British misrule, have for centuries groaned under a foreign monarchical yoke, and are now entitled to share the blessings of our free institutions." I am happy to say, however, that this absurd motion was not even seconded. The population of Boston, exclusive of Charlestown, Roxbury, and Cambridge (which may be regarded as suburbs), is at present about 115,000, of which 8000 are Roman Catholics, chiefly of Irish extraction ; but there are besides many Scotch and English emigrants in the city. In order to prove to me how much may be done to advance them in civilization in a single generation, I was taken to a school where nine-tenths of all the children were of parents who had come out from England or Ireland. It was not an examination day, and our visit was wholly unexpected. We entered a suite of three well-aired rooms, containing 550 girls. There were nine teachers in the room. The pupils were all between the ages of nine and thirteen, the greater portion of them the daughters of poor laborers, but some of them of parents in good circumstances. Each scholar was seated on a separate chair with a back to it, the chair being immovably fixed to the ground to prevent noise. There was no uniformity of costume, but evidently much attention to personal neatness, nearly all of them more dressed than would be thought in good taste in chil dren of a corresponding class in England. They had begun their studies at nine o'clock in the morning, and are to be six hours at school, studying fifty minutes at a time, and then being allowed ten minutes for play in a yard adjoining. I observed some of the girls very intent on their task, leaning on their elbows and in other careless attitudes, and we were told by the masters that they avoid as much as possible finding fault with them on minor points when they are studying. The only punishments are a 143 STATE EDUCATION. [CHAP. XL reprimand before the class, and keeping them back after school hours. The look of intelligence in the countenances of the greater number of them was a most pleasing sight. In one of the upper classes they were reading, when we went in, a passage from Paley " On Sleep," and I was asked to select at random from the school- books some poem which the girls might read each in their turn. I chose Gray's Elegy in a Churchyard, as being none of the simplest for young persons to understand. They each read a verse distinctly, and many of them most gracefully, and explained correctly the meaning of nearly all the words and allusions on which I questioned them. We afterward heard the girls of the arithmetic class examined in algebra, and their answers showed that much pains had been taken to make them comprehend the principles on which the methods of calculation depended. We then visited a boy's gram mar school, and found there 420 Protestant and 100 Catholic boys educated together. We remarked that they had a less re fined appearance and were less forward in their education than the girls whom we had just seen, of the same age, and taken from the same class in society. In explanation I was told that it is impossible to give the boys as much schooling, because they can earn money for their parents at an earlier age. The number of public or free schools in Massachusetts in 1845-6, for a population of 800,000 souls, was about 3500, and the number of male teachers 2585, and of female 5000, which would allow a teacher for each twenty-five or thirty chil dren, as many as they can well attend to. The sum raised by direct taxation for the wages and board of the tutors, and for fuel for the schools, is upward of 600,000 dollars, or 120,000 guineas ; but this is exclusive of all expenditure for school-houses, libraries, and apparatus, for which other funds are appropriated, and every year a great number of newer and finer buildings are erected. Upon the whole about one million of dollars is spent in teach ing a population of 800,000 souls, independently of the sums expended on private instruction, which in the city of Boston is supposed to be equal to the money levied by taxes for the free CHAP. XL] PAY OF TEACHERS. 149 schools, or 260,000 dollars (55,000/.). If we were to enforce a school-rate in Great Britain, bearing the same proportion to our population of twenty-eight millions, the tax would amount annu ally to more than seven millions sterling, and would then be far less effective, owing to the higher cost of living, and the com parative average standard of incomes among professional and official men. In Boston the master of the Latin School, where boys are fitted for college, and the master of the High School, where they are taught French, mathematics, and other branches preparatory to a mercantile career, receive each 2400 dollars (500/.), the gov ernor of the state having only 2500 dollars. Their assistants are paid from 1800 to 700 dollars (37 Ql. to 150Z.). The masters of the grammar schools, where boys and girls are taught in separate school-houses English literature, general history, and algebra, have salaries of 1500 dollars (315/.), their male assist ants 600 (1251.), and their female 300 (651.). The mistresses of schools, where children from four to seven years old are taught to read, receive 325 dollars (70/.). In Salem, Roxbury, Lowell, and other large towns, where living is more moderate, the salaries are about one-third less ; and in rural districts, where the schools are not kept open for the whole year, the wages of the teachers are still smaller. The county of Worcester, Massachusetts, for example, has a population of about 100,000, and the number of schools in it is about 543, the schools being kept open some four, others twelve months, and on an average six months in the year. The male teachers, of whom there are about 500, receive 30 dollars (61. 6s.) a month ; the women teachers, of whom there are 700, about 13 dollars a month (21. 15s.). Among other changes, we are told, in the State Reports, that the number of female teachers has been augmented more rapidly than that of the males, especially in schools where the youngest pupils are taught, because the services of women cost less, and are found to be equally, if not more, efficient. But my inform ants in general were desirous that I should understand that the success of their plan of national education does not depend so much 150 SOCIAL POSITION OF TEACHERS. [CHAP. XT. on the number and pay of the teachers as on the interest taken in it by the entire population, who faithfully d vote more time and thought to the management of the schools than to any other public duty. The cost of living in New England may, on the whole, be taken to be at least one-third less than in Great Britain ; and the spirit of the political institutions, the frugal manner of conduct ing the government, the habits of society, and a greater general equality of fortunes, where the custom of primogeniture does not prevail, causes the relative value of incomes such as those above enumerated, to confer a more respectable social position than they would do with us. I was assured that in the country towns the schoolmasters associate with the upper class of citizens, holding as good a place in society as the clergy and medical men, but not ranking so high as the lawyers. On this point, however (the relative position of the teachers), I found great differences of opinion among my informants ; but a general agreement that their pay and social rank ought to be raised, so as to enable the state to command the services of men and women of the best abilities and accomplishments. Channing had, for many years before his death, insisted on the want of institutions to teach the art of teaching. There are now several of these normal schools in full activity, where a course of three years' instruction is given. As yet, however, few can afford to attend more than one year ; but even this short training- has greatly raised the general standard of efficacy, and the bene ficial influence has extended even to schoolmasters who have not yet availed themselves of the new training. The people have, in fact, responded generously to the eloquent exhortations of Channing, not to economize, for the sake of leaving a fortune to the rising generation, at the expense of starving their intellects and impoverishing their hearts. It was a common prejudice, he said, and a fatal error to imagine that the most ordinary abilities are competent to the office of teaching the young. " Their voca tion, on the contrary, is more noble even than that of the states man, arid demands higher powers, great judgment, and a capacity of comprehending the laws of thought arid moral action, arid the CHAP. XL] HIGH OFFICE OF TEACHERS. 151 various springs and motives by which the child may be roused to the most vigorous use of all its faculties." ^ Nevertheless, some of his most enthusiastic admirers confessed to me that they could not assent to his doctrine, that "to teach, whether by word or action, is the highest function on earth," unless young men and women, between the ages of seventeen and twenty-two, are the pupils, instead of children between four and sixteen. They expressed their misgivings and fears that the business of the schoolmaster, who is to teach reading and writing and the elements of knowledge, must check the development of the mind, if not tend to narrow its powers. As the real friends of progress, they had come reluctantly to this conclusion ; but they admitted that to despond at present would be premature. The experiment of promoting the teacher of every school to that rank in society which the importance of his duties entitles him to hold, and of training him in his art, has never yet been tried. We have yet to learn what may be the effect of encouraging men of superior energy and talent, who have a natural taste for the calling, to fit themselves for the profession. It must doubt less entail, like, every other liberal calling, such as the legal, medical, clerical, military, or mercantile, a certain amount of drudgery and routine of business ; but, like all these depart ments, it may afford a field for the enlargement of the mind, if they who exercise it enjoy, in a like degree, access to the best society, can exchange thoughts with the most cultivated minds in their district, and have leisure allowed them for self-culture, together with a reasonable hope, if they distinguish themselves, of being promoted to posts of honor and emolument, not in other professions, such as the clerical, but in their own. The high schools of Boston, supported by the state, are now so well man aged, that some of my friends, who would grudge no expense to engage for their sons the best instructors, send their boys to them as superior to any of the private establishments supported by the rich at great cost. The idea has been recently agitated of pro viding similar free-schools and colleges for girls, because they * Glasgow Ed., vol i. p. 391. 152 EDUCATIONAL MOVEMENT. [CHAP. XL could more easily be induced to stay until the age of sixteen. Young men, it is said, would hate nothing so much as to find themselves inferior in education to the women of their own age and station. Of late years the improvement of the schools has been so rapid, that objects which were thought Utopian even when Channing began his career, have been realized ; and the more sanguine spirits, among whom Mr. Horace Mann, Secretary of the Public Board of Education, stands pre-eminent, continue to set before the eyes of the public an ideal standard so much more elevated, as to make all that has hitherto been accomplished appear as nothing. The taxes self-imposed by the people for educational purposes are still annually on the increase, and the beneficial effects of the system are very perceptible. In all the large towns Lyceums have been established, where courses of lectures are given every winter, and the qualifications of the teachers who deliver them are much higher than formerly. Both the intellectual and social feelings of every class are cultivated by these evening meetings, and it is acknowledged that with the increased taste for reading, cherished by such instruction, habits of greater temperance and order, and higher ideas of comfort, have steadily kept pace. Eight years ago (1838) Channing observed that "millions, wearied by their day's work, have been chained to the pages of Walter Scott, and have owed some bright evening hours and balmier sleep to his magical creations ;" and he pointed out how many of the laboring classes took delight in history and biogra phy, descriptions of nature, in travels and in poetry, as well as graver works. In his Franklin Lecture, addressed, in 1838, to a large body of mechanics and men earning their livelihood " by manual labor," he says, " Books are the true levelers, giving to all who will faithfully use them the society and spiritual pres ence of the best and greatest of our race ; so that an individual may be excluded from what is called good society, and yet not pine for want of intellectual companionship."* When I asked how it happened that in so populous and rich * Channing, vol. ii. p. 378. CHAP. XL] POPULAR LECTURES. 153 a city as Boston there was at present (October, 1845) no regular theater, I was told, among other reasons, that if I went into the houses of persons of the middle and even humblest class, I should often find the father of a family, instead of seeking excitement in a shilling gallery, reading to his wife and four or five children one of the best modern novels, which he has purchased for twenty- five cents ; whereas, if they could all have left home, he could not for many times that sum have taken them to the play. They often buy, in two or three successive numbers of a penny news paper, entire reprints of the tales of Dickens, Bulwer, or other popular writers. Dana, now a lawyer in Boston, and whose acquaintance I had the pleasure of making there, has, in his singularly interest ing and original work, entitled " Two Years before the Mast," not only disclosed to us a lively picture of life in the forecastle, but has shown incidentally how much a crew, composed of the most unpromising materials, rough and illiterate, and recruited at random from the merchant service of different nations, could be improved by associating with a single well-educated messmate. He was able, on one of the few holidays which were granted to them in California by the most tyrannical of captains, to keep them from going ashore, where they would have indulged in dis sipation, by reading to them for hours Scott's historical tale of " Woodstock." We ought scarcely, then, to wonder, after what I have said of the common schools of this city, that crowded audiences should be drawn night after night, through the whole winter, in spite of frost and snow, from the class of laborers and mechanics, mingled with those of higher station, to listen with deep interest to lectures on natural theology, zoology, geology, the writings of Shakspeare, the beauties of " Paradise Lost," the peculiar excellencies of " Comus" and " Lycidas," treated in an elevated style by men who would be heard with pleasure by the most refined audiences in London. Still, however, I hear many complaints that there is a want of public amusements to give relief to the minds of the multitude, whose daily employments are so monotonous that they require, far more than the rich, opportunities of innocent recreation, such 154 LENDING LIBRARIES. tCHAP. XI. as concerts, dancing, and the theater might give, under proper regulations ; for these are now usually discouraged by religion ists, who can find no other substitute for them but sermons and reiterated church services. Among the signs of the times, and of the increasing taste for reading, the great number of lending libraries in every district must not be forgotten. Toward the purchase of these the State grants a certain sum, if an equal amount be subscribed by the inhabitants. They are left to their own choice in the purchase of books ; and the best English poets and novelists are almost always to be met with in each collection, and works of biography, history, travels, natural history, and science. The selection is carefully made with reference to what the people will read, and not what men of higher education and station think they ought to read. CHAPTER XII. Boston, Popular Education, continued. — Patronage of Universities and Science. — Channing on Milton. — Milton's Scheme of teaching the Nat ural Sciences. — New England Free Schools. — Their Origin. — First Puritan Settlers not illiterate. — Sincerity of their Religious Faith. — Schools founded in Seventeenth Century in Massachusetts. — Discouraged in Virginia. — Sir W. Berkeley's Letter. — Pastor Robinson's Views of Progress in Religion. — Organization of Congregational Churches. — No Penalties for Dissent. — Provision made for future Variations in Creeds. — Mode of Working exemplified. — Impossibility of concealing Truths relating to Religion from an educated Population. — Gain to the Higher Classes, especially the Clergy. — New Theological Colleges. — The Lower Orders not rendered indolent, discontented, or irreligious by Education. — Peculiar Stimulus to Popular Instruction in the United States. IT was naturally to be apprehended that, in a pure democracy, or where the suffrage is nearly universal, the patronage of the state would be almost entirely confined to providing means for mere primary education, such as reading, writing-, and ciphering. But such is not the case in Massachusetts, although the annual grants made to the three universities of Harvard, Amherst, and Williams, are now becoming inadequate to the growing wants of a more advanced community, and strenuous exertions are making to enlarge them. In the mean time, private bequests and donations have of late years poured in upon Harvard Uni versity from year to year, some of them on a truly munificent scale. Since my first visit to Cambridge, professorships of bot any, comparative anatomy, and chemistry have been founded. There was previously a considerable staff for the teaching of literature, law, and medicine ; and lately an entire new depart ment for engineering, natural philosophy, chemistry, geology, mineralogy, and natural history, in their application to the arts, has been instituted. One individual, Mr. Abbott Lawrence, a gentleman still in the prime of life, has contributed no less a sum than 100,000 dollars '20,000 guineas) toward the support 156 PATRONAGE OF SCIENCE. [CHAP. XU. of this department. One of the new chairs is now filled by a zoologist of the highest European reputation, Professor Agassiz. A splendid bequest also, of equal amount (100,000 dollars), has recently been made to the Cambridge Observatory, for which the country had already obtained, at great cost, a large telescope, which has resolved the great nebula in Orion, and has enabled the astronomer, Mr. Bond, simultaneously with an English ob server, Mr. Lassell, to discover a new satellite of Saturn. That the State, however, will not be checked by any narrow utilitarian views in its patronage of the university and the higher departments of literature and science, we may confidently infer from the grants made so long ago as March, 1830, by the frugal Legislature of Massachusetts, for a trigonometrical survey, and for geological, botanical, and zoological explorations of the coun try, executed by men whose published reports prove them to have been worthy of the trust. It was to be expected that some dem agogues would attempt to persuade the people that such an ex penditure of public money was profligate in the extreme, and that as the universities have a dangerous aristocratic tendency, so these liberal appropriations of funds for scientific objects were an evi dence that the Whig party were willing to indulge the fancies of the few at the charge of the many. Accordingly, one orator harangued the fishermen of Cape Cod on this topic, saying that the government had paid 1500 dollars out of the Treasury to remunerate Dr. Storer — for what ? for giving Latin names to some of the best known fish ; for christening the common cod Morrhua americana, the shad Alosa vulgaris, and the fall her ring Clupea vulgaris. His electioneering tactics did not suc ceed ; but might they not have gained him many votes in certain English constituencies? Year after year, subsequently to 1837, the columns of " the leading journal" of Great Britain were filled with attacks in precisely the same style of low and ignorant ridi cule against the British Association, and the memoirs of some of the ablest writers in Europe on natural history and science, who were assailed with vulgar abuse. Such articles would not have been repeated so perseveringly, nor have found an echo in the " British Critic" and several magazines, had they not found sym- CHAP. XII.] CIIANNING ON MILTON. 157 pathy in the minds of a large class of readers, who ought, by their station, to have been less prejudiced, and who, in reality, have no bigoted aversion to science itself, but simply dread the effects of its dissemination among the peo*ple at large. It is remarkable that a writer of such genius and so enlarged a mind as Channing, who was always aiming to furnish the mul titude with sources of improvement and recreation, should have dwelt so little on the important part which natural history and the physical sciences might play, if once the tastes of the million were turned to their study and cultivation. From several passa ges in his works, it is evident that he had never been imbued writh the slightest knowledge or feeling for such pursuits ; and this is apparent even in his splendid essay on Milton, one of the most profound, brilliant, and philosophical dissertations in the English language. Dr. Johnson, while he had paid a just hom age to the transcendent genius of the great poet and the charms of his verse, had allowed his party feelings and bigotry to blind him to all that was pure and exalted in Milton's character. Chan ning, in his vindication, pointed out how Johnson, with all his strength of thought and reverence for virtue and religion, his vig orous logic, and practical wisdom, wanted enthusiasm and lofty sentiment. Hence, his passions engaged him in the unworthy task of obscuring the brighter glory of one of the best and most virtuous of men. But the American champion of the illustrious bard fails to remark that Milton was also two centuries in ad vance of the age in which he lived, in his appreciation of the share which the study of nature ought to hold in the training of the youthful mind. Of Milton's scheme for enlarging the ordi nary system of teaching, proposed after he had himself been prac tically engaged in the task as a schoolmaster, the lexicographer spoke, as might have been anticipated, in terms of disparagement bordering on contempt. He treated Milton, in fact, as a mere empiric and visionary projector, observing that " it was his pur pose to teach boys something more solid than the common litera ture of schools, by reading those authors that treat of physical subjects." — " The poet Cowley had formed a similar plan in his imaginary college ; but the knowledge of external nature, and the 158 DR. JOHNSON. [CHAP. XII. sciences which that knowledge requires, are not the great or the frequent business of the human mind : and we ought not" he adds, " to turn off attention* from life to nature, as if we were placed here to watch the growth of plants, or the motions of the stars." That a violent shock had been given in the sixteenth century to certain time-honored dogmas, by what is here slightingly called " watching the motions of the stars," was an historical fact with which Johnson was of course familiar ; but if it had been adduced to prove that they who exercise their reasoning powers, in inter preting the great book of nature, are constantly arriving at new truths, and occasionally required to modify preconceived opinions, or that when habitually engaged in such discipline, they often ac quire independent habits of thought, applicable to other depart ments of human learning, such arguments would by no means have propitiated the critic, or have induced him to moderate his disapprobation of the proposed innovations. In the mind of John son there was a leaning to superstition, and no one was more con tent to leave the pupil to tread forever in beaten paths, and to cherish extreme reverence for authority, for which end the whole system then in vogue in the English schools and colleges was ad mirably conceived. For it confined the studies of young men, up to the age of twenty-two, as far as possible to the non-progressive departments of knowledge, to the ancient models of classical ex cellence, whether in poetry or prose, to theological treatises, to the history and philosophy of the ancients rather than the mod erns, and to pure mathematics rather than their application to physics. No modern writer was more free from fear of inquiry, more anxious to teach the millions to think and reason for them selves, no one ever looked forward more enthusiastically to the future growth and development of the human mind, than Chan- ning. If his own education had not been cast in an antique mold, he would have held up Milton as a model for imitation, not only for his love of classical lore and poetry, but for his wish to cultivate a knowledge of the works of nature. Certainly no people ever started with brighter prospects of uniting the promotion of both these departments, than the people CHAP. XII.] ORIGIN OF FREE SCHOOLS. 159 of New England at this moment. Of the free schools which they have founded, and the plan of education adopted by them for children of all sects and stations in society, they feel justly proud, for it is the most original thing which America has yet produced. The causes of their extraordinary success and recent progress, well deserve more attention than they have usually received from foreigners, especially as it seems singular at first sight, and almost paradoxical, that a commonwealth founded by the Puritans, whom we are accustomed to regard as the enemies of polite literature and science, should now take so prominent a lead as the patrons of both ; or that a sect which was so prone to bibliolatry that they took their pattern and model of civil government, and even their judicial code, from the Old Testament, who carried their theory of the union of Church and State so far as to refuse the civil franchise to all who were not in full com munion with their Church, and who persecuted for a time some non-conformists, even to the death, should nevertheless have set an example to the world of religious toleration, and have been the first to establish schools for popular education open to the children of all denominations — Romanist, Protestant, and Jew. If any one entertains a doubt that the peculiar character stamped upon the present generation of New Englanders, in relation to religious and political affairs, is derived directly and indisputably from their Puritan ancestors, let them refer to the history of Massachusetts. According to the calculation of Ban croft, the first Puritan settlers of New England are the parents of one-third of the whole white population of the United States. Within the first fifteen years (and there never was afterward any considerable increase from England) there came over 21,200 persons, or 4000 families. Their descendants, he says, are now (1840) not far from 4,000,000. Each family has multiplied on the average to 1000 souls, and they have carried to New York and Ohio, where they constitute half the population, the Puritan system of free schools, which they established from the beginning. When we recollect that the population of all England is computed to have scarcely exceeded five millions when the chief body of the Puritans first emigrated to the New World, we 160 FIRST PURITAN SETTLERS. [CHAP. XII. may look upon, the present descendants of the first colonists as constituting a nation hardly inferior in numbers to what England itse]f was only two centuries before our times. The development, therefore, of the present inhabitants from a small original stock has been so rapid, and the intermediate generations so few, that we must be quite prepared to discover in the founders of the colony of the seventeenth century, the germ of all the wonderful results which have since so rapidly unfolded themselves. Nor is this difficult. In the first place, before the great civil war broke out in England, when the principal emigration took place to Massachusetts, the Puritans were by no means an illit erate or uncultivated sect. They reckoned in their ranks a considerable number of men of good station and family, who had received the best education which the schools and universities then afforded. Some of the most influential of the early New England divines, such as Cotton Mather, were good scholars, and have left writings which display much reading and an acquaint ance with the Greek and Latin languages. Milton's " Paradise Lost" usually accompanied the Bible into the log-houses of the early settlers, and with the " Paradise Lost" the minor poems of the same author were commonly associated. The Puritans who first went into exile, after enduring much oppression in their native country, were men who were ready to brave the wilderness rather than profess doctrines or conform to a ritual which they abhorred. They were a pure and conscien tious body. They might be ignorant or fanatical, but they were at least sincere, and no hypocrites had as yet been tempted to join them for the sake of worldly promotion, as happened at a later period, when Puritanism in the mother country had become dominant in the state. Full of faith, and believing that their religious tenets must be strengthened by free investigation, they held that the study and interpretation of the Scriptures should not be the monopoly of a particular order of men, but that every layman was bound to search them for himself. Hence they were anxious to have all their children taught to read. So early as the year 1647, they instituted common schools, the law declaring " that all the brethren shall teach their children and apprentices CHAP. XII.] SCHOOLS EARLY FOUNDED. 161 to read, and that every township of fifty householders shall ap point one to teach all the children."^ Very different was the state of things in the contemporary colony of Virginia, to which the Cavaliers and the members of the Established Church were thronging. Even fifteen or twenty years later, Sir William Berkeley, who was governor of Virginia for nearly forty years, and was one of the best of the colonial rulers, spoke thus, in the full sincerity of his heart, of his own province, in a letter written after the restoration of Charles II. : — "I thank God there are no free schools or printing, and I hope we shall not have them these hundred years. For learning has brought heresy and disobedience and sects into the world, and printing has divulged them, and libels against the best govern ment. God keep us from both."f Sir William Berkeley was simply expressing here, in plain terms, the chief motives which still continue to defeat or retard the cause of popular education in some parts of the United States and in many countries of Europe, England not excepted — a dread of political change while the people remain in ignorance, and a fear of removing that ignorance, lest it should bring on changes of religious opinion. The New Englanders were from the beginning so republican in spirit, that they were not likely to share Governor Berkeley's apprehensions of a growing dislike to " the best of governments," as he termed the political maxims of the Stuarts ; and if, for a time, they cherished hopes of preserv ing uniformity of religious opinion, and even persecuted some who would not conform to their views, their intolerance was of short duration, and soon gave way to those enlightened views of civil and religious freedom which they had always professed, even when they failed to carry them into practice. If we contrast the principles before alluded to of the leading men in Massachusetts with those of the more southern settlers, in the early part of the seventeenth century, we learn without surprise that at a time when there was not one bookseller's shop in Virginia and no printing presses, there were several in Boston, * Bancroft, vol. i. p. 458. t Chalmers, cited by Graham, Hist, of U. S., vol. i. p. 103. 162 PROGRESS IN RELIGION. [CHAP. XII. with no less than five printing-offices, a fact which reflects the more credit on the Puritans, because at the same period (1724) there were no less than thirty-four counties in the mother country, Lancashire being one of the number, in which there was no printer.^ When the Pilgrim Fathers were about to sail in the May flower from Leyden, a solemn fast was held before they embarked, and their pastor, Robinson, gave them a farewell address, in which these memorable words are recorded : — " I charge you, before God and his blessed angels, that you follow rne no further than you have seen me follow the Lord Jesus Christ. The Lord has more truth yet to break forth out of his holy word. For my part, I can not sufficiently bewail the condition of the reformed churches, who are come to a period in religion, and will go at present no further than the instruments of their first reformation. The Lutherans can not be drawn to go beyond what Luther saw. Whatever part of His will our good God has imparted and revealed unto Calvin, they will die rather than embrace it. And the Calvinists, you see, stick fast where they were left by that great man of God, who yet saw not all things. This is a misery much to be lamented ; for, though they were burning and shining lights in their times, yet they penetrated not into the whole counsel of God : but, were they now living, they would be as willing to embrace further light as that which they first received. I beseech you to remember it ; it is an article of your church-covenant, that you will be ready to receive whatever truth shall be made known unto you from the written word of God. Remember that and every other article of your most sacred covenant." It may be said that the spirit of progress, the belief in the future discovery of new truths, and the expansion of Christianity, which breathes through every passage of this memorable dis course, did not characterize the New England Independents any more than the members of other sects. Like the rest, they had embodied their interpretations of Scripture in certain fixed and definite propositions, and were .but little disposed to cherish the * Macaulay, History of England, vol. i. p. 392, who cites Nichols. CHAP. XII.] NO PENALTIES FOR DISSENT. 163 doctrine of the gradual development of Christianity. The Roman ists had stopped short at the council of Trent, when the decrees of a general council were canonized by the sanction of an infal lible Pope. In like manner, almost every Protestant church has acted as if religion ceased to be progressive at the precise moment of time when their own articles of belief were drawn up, after much dispute and difference of opinion. But the precepts inculcated by Pastor Robinson were delivered to a body of men whose form of ecclesiastical polity was very peculiar ; who held that each congregation, each separate society of fellow- worshipers, constituted within themselves a perfect and independent church, whose duty it was to compose for itself and modify at pleasure its rules of scriptural interpretation. In con formity with these ideas, the common law of New England had ruled, that the majority of the pew-holders in each church should retain their property in a meeting-house, and any endowment belonging to it, whatever new opinions they might, in the course of time, choose to adopt. In other words, if, in the lapse of ages, they should deviate from the original standard of faith, they should not suffer the usual penalties of dissent, by being dispos sessed of the edifice in which they were accustomed to worship, or of any endowments given or bequeathed for a school-house or the support of a pastor, but should continue to hold them ; the minority who still held fast to the original tenets of the sect, having to seek a new place of worship, but being allowed to dispose of their pews, as of every other freehold, if purchasers could be found. Every year in some parts of New England, where the popu lation is on the increase, the manner in which some one of these new congregations starts into existence may be seen. A few individuals, twenty perhaps, are in the habit of meeting together on the Sabbath in a private dwelling, or in the school-house already built for the children of all denominations in the new village. One of the number offers a prayer, another reads a chapter in the Bible, another a printed sermon, and perhaps a fourth offers remarks, by way of exhortation, to his neighbors. As the population increases, they begin to think of forming them- 164 CONGREGATIONAL CHURCHES. [CHAP. XTI. selves into a church, and settling a minister. But first they have to agree upon some creed or covenant which is to be the basis of their union. In drawing up this creed they are usually assisted by some neighboring minister, and it is then submitted for approbation to a meeting of all the church members, and is thoroughly discussed and altered till it suits the peculiar and prevailing shades of opinion of the assembly. When at length it is assented to, it is submitted to a council of neighboring ministers, who examine into its scriptural basis, and who, accord ing as they approve or disapprove of it, give or withhold " the hand of fellowship." The next step is to elect a pastor. After hearing several candidates preach, they invite one to remain with them ; and, after he has been ordained by the neighboring ministers, agree on the salary to be insured to him, for the collection of which certain members become responsible. It rarely exceeds 700 dollars, and more usually amounts in rural districts to 500 dol lars, or 100 guineas annually. By the Congregationalists, a church is defined to be a com pany of pious persons, who voluntarily unite together for the worship of God. Each company being self-created, is entirely independent of every other, has the power to elect its own offi cers, and to admit or exclude members. Each professes to regard creeds and confessions of faith simply as convenient guides in the examination of candidates, not standards of religious truth. They may be the opinions of good and wise men, venerable by their antiquity, but of no binding authority, and are to be measured in each separate church by their conformity with Scripture. As to the union of different churches, it is pure]y voluntary, and has been compared to a congress of sovereign states, having certain general interests in common, but entirely independent of each other. There are no articles of union ; but if any old or new society is thought to depart so widely from the other churches that they can no longer be recognized as Christians, the rest withhold or withdraw their fellowship. Upon the whole, the separate congregational churches, both in Old and New England, in all above 3000 in number, have CHAP. XII.] CONGREGATIONAL CHURCHES. 165 held together more firmly for two centuries, and have deviated far less from the original standard of faith, than might have been expected ; although in Massachusetts and some neighboring States, more than a hundred meeting-houses, some of them hav ing endowments belonging to them, have in the course of the last forty years been quietly transferred, by the majority of the pew-holders, to what may be said to constitute new denomina tions. The change usually takes place when a new minister is inducted. This system of ecclesiastical polity is peculiarly re pugnant to the ideas entertained by churchmen in general, whose elibrts are almost invariably directed, whether in Protestant or Romanist communities, to inculcate a deep sense of the guilt of schism, and to visit that guilt as far as possible with pecuniary penalties and spiritual outlawry. The original contract is usually based on a tacit assumption that religion is not, like other branch es of knowledge, progressive in its nature ; and, therefore, instead of leaving the mind unfettered and free to embrace and profess new interpretations, as would be thought desirable where the ivorks of God are the subjects of investigation, every precaution is taken to prevent doubt, fluctuation, and change. It is even deemed justifiable to exact early vows and pledges against the teaching of any new doctrines ; and if the zealous inquirer should, in the course of years and much reading, catch glimpses of truths not embodied in his creed, riay, the very grounds of which could not be known to him when he entered the church, nor to the original framers of his articles of religion, no provision is made for enabling him to break silence, or openly to declare that he has modified his views. On the contrary, such a step must usually be attended with disgrace, and often with destitution. Nor does the intensity of this feeling seem by any means to diminish in modern times with the multiplication of new sects. It is even exhibited as strongly in bodies which dissent from old establishments as in those establishments themselves. Wesley, for example, took the utmost care that every Methodist chapel should be so vested in the " General Conference," as to insure the forfeiture of the building to the trustees, if any particular congregation should deviate from his standard of faith, or even 166 FUTURE VARIATIONS IN CREEDS. [€HAP. XII, should return to the Church of England, whose doctrines they had never renounced. But the most signal instance of a fixed determination to prevent any one congregation from changing its mind in regard to any dogma or rite, until all the others associat ed with it are ready to move on in the same direction, has been exemplified in our times by the Free Kirk of Scotland. More than a million of the population suddenly deserted the old estab lishment, and were compelled to abandon hundreds of ecclesiasti cal buildings, in which they had worshiped from their childhood. Some of these edifices remained useless for a time, locked up, and no service performed in them, because the minister and nearly all the parishioners had joined in the secession. It was necessary for the separatists to erect 700 or 800 new edifices and school-houses, on which they expended several hundred thousand pounds, having often no small difficulty to obtain new sites for churches, so that their ministers preached for a time, like the Covenanters of old, in the open air. It was under these circumstances, and at the moment of submitting to such sacrifices, that their new ecclesiastical organization was completed, provid ing that if any one of several hundred congregations should here after deviate, in ever so slight a degree, from any one of the numerous articles of faith drawn up nearly three centuries ago, under the sanction of John Knox, or from any one of the rules and forms of church government then enacted, they should be dispos sessed of the newly erected building, and all funds thereunto belonging. Had any other contract been proposed, implying the possibility of any future change or improvement in doctrine or ceremony, not a farthing would have been contributed by these zealous Presbyterians ; nor have they acted inconsistently, inas much as they are fully persuaded that they neither participate in an onward or backward movement, but are simply reverting to that pure and perfect standard of orthodoxy of the middle of the sixteenth century, from which others have so sinfully departed. It is only in times comparatively modern, that the opinion has gained ground in Europe, and very recently in Scotland, that in the settlement of landed property there should be some limitation of the power of the dead over the living, and that a testator can CHAP. XII.] FUTURE VARIATIONS IN CREEDS. 167 not be gifted with such foresight as to enable him to know beforehand in what manner, and subject to what conditions, his wealth may be best distributed among his descendants, several generations hence, for their own benefit or that of the community at large. Whether, in ecclesiastical matters, also, there should not be some means provided of breaking the entail without resort ing to what is termed in Scotland " a disruption," so that devia tions from theological formularies many centuries old, should not be visited with pecuniary losses or disgrace — whether it be ex pedient to allow the Romanist or Calvinist, the Swedenborgian or Socinian, and every other sectary to enforce, by the whole power of the wealth he may bequeath to posterity, the teaching of his own favorite dogmas for an indefinite time, and when a large part of the population on whom he originally bestowed his* riches have altered their minds, are points on which a gradual change has been taking place in the opinions of not a few of the higher classes at least. Of this no one will doubt who remem bers or will refer to the debates in both Houses of the British Parliament in 1844,^ and the speeches of eminent statesmen of opposite politics when the Dissenters' Chapel Bill was discussed. But whatever variety of views there may still be on this sub ject in Europe, it is now the settled opinion of many of the most thoughtful of the New Englanders, that the assertion of the independence of each separate congregation, was as great a step toward freedom of conscience as all that had been previously gained by Luther's Reformation ; and it constitutes one of those characteristics of church government in New England, which, whether approved of or not, can not with propriety be lost sight of, when we endeavor to trace out the sources of the love of pro gress, which has taken so strong a hold of the public mind in New England, and which has so much facilitated their plan of national education. To show how widely the spirit of their peculiar ecclesiastical system has spread, I may state that even the Roman Catholics have, in different states, and in three or foui cases (one of which is still pending, in 1848—9), made an appeal to the courts of law, and endeavored to avail themselves of the * See the Debates on 7 & 8 Viet., ch. xlv, A D. 1844. 168 CONGREGATIONAL POLITY. [CHAP. XII. principle of the Independents, so that the majority of a separate congregation should be entitled to resist the appointment by their bishop of a priest to whom they had strong objections. The courts seem hitherto to have determined that, as the building belonged to the majority of the pew-holders, they might deal with it as they pleased ; but they have declined to pronounce any opinion on points of ecclesiastical discipline, leaving the members of each sect free, in this respect, to obey the dictates of their own conscience. But to exemplify the more regular working of the congrega tional polity within its own legitimate sphere, I will mention a recent case which came more home to my own scientific pursuits. A. young man of superior talent, with whom I was acquainted, who was employed as a geologist in the state survey of Pennsyl vania, was desirous of becoming a minister of the Presbyterian Church in that state ; but, when examined, previous to ordina tion, he was unable to give satisfactory answers to questions respecting the plenary inspiration of Scripture, because he con sidered such a tenet, when applied to the first book of Gene sis, inconsistent with discoveries now universally admitted, re specting the high antiquity of the earth, and the existence of living beings on the globe long anterior to man. The rejected candidate, whose orthodoxy on all other points was fully admitted, was then invited by an Independent congregation in New En gland, to become their pastor ; and when he accepted the offer, the other associated churches were called upon to decide whether they would assist in ordaining one who claimed the right to teach freely his own views on the question at issue. The right of the congregation to elect him, whether the other churches approved of the doctrine or not, was conceded ; and a strong inclination is always evinced, by the affiliated societies, to come, if possible, to an amicable understanding. Accordingly, a discussion ensued, and is perhaps still going on, whether, consistently with a fair interpretation of Scripture, or with what is essential to the faith of a Christian, the doctrine of complete and immediate inspiration may or may not be left as an open question. Some of my readers may perhaps exclaim that this incident CHAP. XII. ] CHURCHMEN ON PHYSICAL SCIENCE. 169 proves that the Congregationalists of New England are far behind many orthodox divines of the Church of England, or even the Church of Rome, as shown by Dr. Wiseman's lectures, in the liberality of their opinions on this head, and that the establish ment of the true theory of astronomy satisfied the Protestant world, at least, that the Bible was never intended as a revelation of physical science. No doubt it is most true, that within the last forty years many distinguished writers and dignitaries of the English Church have expressed their belief very openly in regard to the earth's antiquity, and the leading truths established by geology. " The Records of Creation," published in 1818, by the present Archbishop of Canterbury (Dr. Sumner), the writings of the present Dean of Westminster (Dr. Buckland), those of the Dean of LlandafF(Dr. Conybeare), and of the Woodwardian Pro fessor of Cambridge (The Rev. A. Sedgwick), and others, might be adduced in confirmation. All of these, indeed, have been cited by the first teachers of geology in America, especially in the " orthodox universities" of New England, as countenancing the adoption of their new theories ; and I have often heard scientific men in America express their gratitude to the English Church men for the protection which their high authority afforded them against popular prejudices at a critical moment, when many of the State Legislatures were deliberating whether they should or should not appropriate large sums of the public money to the pro motion of geological surveys. The point, however, under dis cussion in the Congregationalist Church, to which I have alluded, is in reality a different one, and of the utmost importance ; for it is no less than to determine, not whether a minister may publish books or essays declaratory of his own individual views, respect ing the bearing of physical science on certain portions of Scrip ture, but whether he may, without reproach or charge of indis cretion, freely and candidly expound to all whom he addresses, rich and poor, from the pulpit, those truths on which few well- informed men now any longer entertain a doubt. Until such permission be fairly granted, the initiated may, as we well know, go on for ages embracing one creed, while the multitude holds fast to another, and looks with suspicion and distrust on the phi- VOL: I.— H 170 BIBLICAL CONTROVERSY. [CHAP. XII. losopher who unreservedly makes known the most legitimate de ductions from facts. Such, in truth, is the present condition of things throughout Christendom, the millions being left in the same darkness respecting the antiquity of the globe, and the suc cessive races of animals and plants which inhabited it before the creation of man, as they were in the middle ages ; or, rather, each new generation being allowed to grow up with, or derive from Genesis, ideas directly hostile to the conclusions universally received by all who have studied the earth's autobiography. Not merely the multitude, but many of those who are called learned, still continue, while beholding with delight the external beauty of the rocks and mountains, to gaze on them as Virgil's hero ad mired his shield of divine workmanship, without dreaming of its historical import : — " Dona parentis Miratur, rerumque ignarus imagine gaudet." The extent to which, in Protestant countries, and where there is a free press, opinions universally entertained by the higher classes, may circulate among them in print and may yet remain a sealed book to the million as completely as if they were still in sacerdotal keeping, is such as no one antecedently to experience would have believed possible. The discoveries alluded to are by no means confined to the domain of physical science. I may cite as one remarkable example the detection of the spurious nature of the celebrated verse in the First Epistle of John, chap. v. verse 7, commonly called "the Three Heavenly Witnesses." Luther, in the last edition which he published of the Bible, had expunged this passage as spurious ; but, shortly after his death, it was re stored by his followers, in deference to popular prepossessions and Trinitarian opinions. Erasmus omitted it in his editions of the New Testament in the years 1516 and 1519; and after it had been excluded by several other eminent critics, Sir Isaac Newton wrote his celebrated dissertation on the subject between the years 1690 and 1700, strengthening the arguments previously adduced against the genuineness of the verse. Finally, Porson published, in 1788 and 1790, his famous letters, by which the question was CHAP. XII.] BIBLICAL CONTROVERSY. 171 forever set at rest. It was admitted that in. all the Greek MSS. of the highest antiquity, the disputed passages were wanting, and Person enumerated a long list of Greek and Latin authors, in cluding the names of many fathers of the Church, who, in their controversies with Arians and Socinians, had not availed them selves of the text in question, although they had cited some of the verses which immediately precede and follow, which lend a comparatively feeble support to their argument. All who took the lead against the genuineness of the passage, except Sir Isaac Newton, were Trinitarians ; but doubtless felt with Person, that " he does the best service to truth who hinders it from being supported by falsehood." Throughout the con troversy, many eminent divines of the Anglican church have distinguished themselves by their scholarship and candor, and it is well known by those who have of late years frequented the literary circles of Rome, that the learned Cardinal Mai was prevented, in 1838, from publishing his edition of the Codex Vaticanus, because he could not obtain leave from the late Pope (Gregory XVI.) to omit the interpolated passages, and had satisfied himself that they were wanting in all the most ancient MSS. at Rome and Paris. The Pontiff refused, because he was bound by the decrees of the Council of Trent, and of a Church pretending to infallibility, which had solemnly sanctioned the Vulgate, and the Cardinal had too much good faith to give the authority of his name to what he regarded as a forgery. In Ox ford, in 1819, the verse was riot admitted, by the examiners in Divinity, as Scripture warranty for the doctrine of the Trinity ; yet, not only is it retained in the English Prayer-Book, in the epistle selected for the first Sunday after Easter, but the Protest ant Episcopal Church in America, when finally revising their version of the English Liturgy in 1801, several years after Person's letters had been published, did not omit the passage, although they had the pruning knife in their hand, and were lop ping off several entire services, such as the Commination, Gun powder Treason, King Charles the Martyr, the Restoration of Charles II., and last, not least, the Athanasian Creed. What is still more remarkable, Protestants of every denomination have 172 HOGARTH'S ELECTION FEAST. [CHAP. XII. gone on year after year distributing hundreds of thousands of Bibles, not only without striking out this repudiated verse, but without even affixing to it any mark or annotation to show the multitude that it is given up by every one who has the least pretension to scholarship and candor. '* Let Truth, stern arbitress of all, Interpret that original, And for presumptuous wrongs atone ; — Authentic words be given, or none !" It is from no want of entire sympathy with the sentiment expressed in these lines of Wordsworth, and written by him on a blank leaf of Macpherson's Ossian, that literary or scientific men, whether Protestant or Catholic, European or American, clergy or laity, abstain in general from communicating the results of their scientific or biblical researches to the million, still less from any apprehension that the essential truths of Christianity would suffer the slightest injury, were the new views to be universally known. They hesitate, partly from false notions of expediency, and partly through fear of the prejudices of the vulgar. They dare not speak out, for the same reason that the civil and ecclesiastical rulers of England halted for one hundred and seventy years before they had courage to adopt the reform in the Julian calendar, which Gregory XIII., in accordance with astro nomical observations, had effected in 1582. Hogarth, in his picture of the Election Feast, has introduced a banner carried by one of the crowd, on which was inscribed the motto, " Give us back our eleven days," for he remembered when the angry mob, irritated by the innovation of the new style, went screaming these words through the streets of London. In like manner, the acknowledged antiquity of Egyptian civil ization, or of the solid framework of the globe, with its monu ments of many extinct races of living beings, might, if suddenly disclosed to an ignorant people, raise as angry a demand to give them back their old chronology. Hence arises a habit of con cealing from the unlettered public discoveries which might, it is thought, perplex them, and unsettle their old opinions. This method of dealing with the most sacred of subjects, may thus be CHAP. XII.] LAY TEACHERS. 173 illustrated : — A few tares have grown up among the wheat ; you must not pull them up, or you will loosen the soil and expose the roofs of the good grain, arid then all may wither : moreover, you must go on sowing the seeds of the same tares in the mind of the rising generation, for you can not open the eyes of the children without undeceiving and alarming their parents. Now the perpetuation of error among the many, is only one part of the mischief of this want of good faith, for it is also an abandon ment by the few of the high ground on which their religion ought to stand, namely, its truth. It accustoms the teacher to regard his religion in its relation to the millions as a mere piece of machinery, like a police, for preserving order, or enabling one class of men to govern another. If such a state of things be unsound and unsatisfactory, it is not so much the clergy who are to blame as the laity ; for lay men have more freedom of action, and can with less sacrifice of personal interests take the initiative in a reform. The cure of the evil is obvious ; it consists in giving such instruction to the people at large as would make concealment impossible. What ever is known and intelligible to ordinary capacities in science, especially if contrary to the first and natural impressions deriv able from the literal meaning, or ordinary acceptation of the text of Scripture, whether in astronomy, geology, or any other depart ment of knowledge, should be freely communicated to all. Lay teachers, not professionally devoted and pledged to propagate the opinions of particular sects, will do this much more freely than ecclesiastics, and, as a matter of course, in proportion as the standard of public instruction is raised ; and no order of men would be such gainers by the measure as the clergy, especially the most able and upright among them. Every normal school, every advance made in the social and intellectual position of the lay teachers, tends to emancipate, not the masses alone, but still more effectually their spiritual guides, and would increase their usefulness in a tenfold degree. That a clergy may be well informed for the age they live in, and may contain among them many learned and good men, while the people remain in dark ness, we know from history ; for the spiritual instructors may 174 PAY OF CLERGY. [CHAP. XII. wish to keep the multitude in ignorance, with a view of main taining their own po\yer. But no educated people will ever tolerate an idle, illiterate, or stationary priesthood. That this is impossible, the experience of the last quarter of a century in New England has fully proved. In confirmation of this truth, I may appeal to the progress made by the ministers of the Meth odist and Baptist churches of late years. Their missionaries found the Congregationalists slumbering in all the security of an old establishment, and soon made numerous converts, besides recruiting their ranks largely from newly arrived emigrants. They were able to send more preachers into the vineyard, be cause they required at first scarcely any preparation or other qualification than zeal. . But no sooner had the children of the first converts been taught in the free schools under an improved system, than the clergy of these very denominations, who had for a time gloried in their ignorance and spoken with contempt of all human knowledge, found it necessary to study for some years in theological seminaries, and attend courses of church history, the Greek, Latin, Hebrew, and German languages, the modern writings of German and other biblical scholars, and every branch of divinity. The Baptist college at Newton has greatly distinguished itself among others, and that of the Meth odists at Middletown in Connecticut ; while the Independents have their theological college at Andover in Massachusetts, which has acquired much celebrity, and drawn to it pupils from great distances, and of many different denominations. The large collections of books on divinity which are now seen in the libraries of New England clergy, were almost unknown a quarter of a century ago. The average pay, also, of the clergy in the rural districts of New England has increased. About the middle of the last century, it was not more than 200 dollars annually, so that they were literally " passing rich with forty pounds a year ;" whereas now they usually receive 500 at least, and some in the cities 2000 or 3000 dollars. Nor can there be a doubt that, in pro portion as the lay teachers are more liberally remunerated, the scale of income required to command the services of men of CHAP. XIL] POPULAR INSTRUCTION. 175 first-rate talent in the clerical profession, must and will be raised. Already there are many indications in Massachusetts that a demand for higher qualifications in men educated for the pulpit is springing up. It is no bad augury to hear a minister exhort his younger brethren at their ordination not to stand in awe of their congregations, but to remember they have before them sin ful men who are to be warned, not critics who are to be propi tiated. " Formerly," said Channing, " Felix trembled before Paul ; it is now the successor of Paul who trembles :" — a saying which, coming as it did from a powerful and successful preacher, implies that the people are awaking, not that they are growing indifferent about religious matters, but that the day of soporific discourses, full of empty declamation or unmeaning common places, is drawing to a close. It will be asked, however, even by some who are favorable to popular education, whether the masses can have leisure to profit in after life by such a style of teaching as the government of Massachusetts is now ambitious of affording to the youth of the country, between the ages of four and fourteen. To this I may answer, that in nations less prosperous and progressive it is ascer tained that men may provide for all their bodily wants, may feed and clothe themselves, and yet give up one-seventh part of their time, or every Sabbath, to their religious duties. That their re ligion should consist not merely in the cultivation of a devotional spirit toward their Maker, but also in acquiring pure and lofty conceptions of his attributes — a knowledge of the power and wisdom displayed in his works — an acquaintance with his moral laws — a just sense of their own responsibility, and an exercise of their understandings in appreciating the evidences of their faith, few of my readers will deny. To insure the accomplishment of these objects, a preparatory education in good schools is indis pensable. It is not enough to build churches and cathedrals, to endow universities or theological colleges, or to devote a large portion of the national revenues to enable a body of spiritual in structors to discharge, among other ecclesiastical duties, that ot preaching good sermons from the pulpit. Their seed may full 176 POPULAR INSTRUCTION. [CHAP. XII. on a soil naturally fertile, but will perish if there has been no previous culture of the ground. At the end of seventy years men of good natural abilities, who have been attentive to their religious observances, have given up ten entire years of their life, a period thrice as long as is required for an academical course of study, and at the close of such a career may, as we know, be ignorant, sensual, and superstitious, and have little love or taste for things intellectual or spiritual. But granting that time and leisure may be found, it will still be asked whether, if men of the humblest condition be taught to enjoy the poems of Milton and Gray, the romances of Scott, or lectures on literature, astronomy, and botany, or if they read a daily newspaper and often indulge in the stirring excitement of party politics, they will be contented with their situation in life, and submit to hard labor. All apprehension of such consequences is rapidly disappearing in the more advanced states of the Ameri can Union. It is acknowledged by the rich that, where the free schools have been most improved, the people are least addicted to intemperance, are more provident, have more respect for prop erty and the laws, are more conservative, and less led away by socialist or other revolutionary doctrines. So far from indolence being the characteristic of the laboring classes, where they are best informed, the New Englanders are rather too much given to overwork both body and brain. They make better pioneers, when roughing it in a log-house in the backwoods, than the un educated Highlander or Irishman ; and the factory girls of Lowell, who publish their " Offering," containing their own original poems and essays, work twelve hours a day, and have not yet petitioned for a ten-hour bill. In speculating on the probability of the other states in the north, south, and west, some of them differing greatly in the de gree of their social advancement, and many of them retarded by negro slavery, adopting readily the example set them by the New Englanders. and establishing free and normal schools, I find that American enthusiasts build their hopes chiefly on that powerful stimulus which they say is offered by their institutions for popular education — a stimulus such as was never experienced CHAP. XII.] POPULAR INSTRUCTION. 177 before in any country in the world. This consists not so much in the absence of pauperism, or in the individual liberty enjoyed by every one in civil and religious rights, but in the absence of the influence of family and fortune — the fair field of competition, freely open to all who aspire, however humble, to rise one day to high employments, especially to official or professional posts, whether lay or ecclesiastical, civil or military, requiring early cultivation. Few will realize their ambitious longings ; but every parent feels it a duty to provide that his child should not be shut out from all chance of winning some one of the numerous prizes, which are awarded solely on the ground of personal quali fications, not always to the most worthy, but at least without any regard to birth or hereditary wealth. It seems difficult to foresee the limit of taxation which a population, usually very in tolerant of direct taxes, will not impose on themselves to secure an object in which they have all so great a stake, nor does any serious obstacle or influence seem likely to oppose their will. There is in no state, for example, any dominant ecclesiastical body sufficiently powerful to thwart the maxims of those states men who maintain that, as the people are determined to govern themselves, they must be carefully taught and fitted for self- government, and receive secular instruction in common schools open to all. The Roman Catholic priests, it is true, in the state of New York, where there are now 11,000 schools in a popula tion of two millions and a half, have made some vigorous efforts to get the exclusive management of a portion of the school funds into their own hands, and one, at least, of the Protestant sects has openly avowed its sympathy in the movement. But they have failed from the extreme difficulty of organizing a combined effort, where the leaders of a great variety of rival denominations are jealous of one another ; and, fortunately, the clergy are be coming more and more convinced that, where the education of the million has been carried farthest, the people are most regular in their attendance on public worship, most zealous in the de fense of their theological opinions, and most liberal in contribut ing funds for the support of their pastors and the building of churches. H* CHAPTER XIII. Leaving Boston for the South. — Railway Stove. — Fall of Snow. — New Haven, and Visit to Professor Silliman. — New York. — Improvements in the City. — Croton Waterworks. — Fountains. — Recent Conflagration. — New Churches. — Trinity Church. — News from Europe of Converts to Rome. — Reaction against Tractarians. — Electric Telegraph, its Progress in America. — Morse and Wheatstone. — 11,000 Schools in New York for Secular Instruction. — Absence of Smoke. — Irish Voters. — Nativism. Dec. 3. 1 845. — HAVING resolved to devote the next six months of my stay in America to a geological exploration of those parts of the country which I had not yet visited, I left Boston just as the cold weather was setting in, to spend the winter in the south. The thermometer had fallen to 23° F., and on our way to the cars we saw skaters on the ice in the common. Soon after we started, heavy snow began to fall, but in spite of the storm we were carried to Springfield, 100 miles, in five hours. We passed a luggage train with twenty-two loaded cars, rolling past us in the opposite direction, on 1 0 0 wheels, including those of the engine and tender. In the English railways, the passengers often suffer much from cold in winter. Here, the stove in the center of the long omnibus is a great luxury, and I saw one traveler after an other leave his seat, walk up to it and warm his feet on the fender. As I was standing there, a gentleman gave me the President's speech to read, which, by means of a railway express, had, for the first time, been brought from Washington to Boston, 470 miles, in one day. It was read with interest, as all were speculating on the probability of a war with England about Oregon. While I was indulging my thoughts on the rapid communication of intelligence by newspapers and the speed and safety of railway traveling, a fellow-passenger interrupted my pleasing reveries by telling me I was standing too near the iron stove, which had scorched my clothes and burnt a hole in my great coat, and immediately afterward I learnt at Springfield, that CHAP. XIII. ] VISIT TO PROFESSOR SILLIMAN. 179 the cars on the line between that town and Albany, where there is only one track, had run against a luggage train near Chester, and many passengers were injured. Some say that two were killed. According to others, one of the trains was five minutes before its time ; but our informant took my thoughts back to England, and English narratives of the like catastrophes by say ing, " It has been ascertained that no one was to blame." We had no reason to boast of our speed the next day, for we were twelve hours in going sixty- two miles to New Haven. The delay was caused by ice on the rail, and by our having to wait to let the New York train pass us, there being only one line of rail. A storm in the Sound had occasioned the New York cars to be five hours behind their time. We saw many sleighs dashing past and crossing our road. It was late before we reached the hospitable house of Professor Silliman, who with his son gave me jnany valuable instructions for my southern tour. Their letters of introduction, however, though most useful, were a small part of the service they did me both in this tour and during my former visit to America. Every where, even in the states most remote from New England, I met with men who, having been the pupils of Professor Silliman, and having listened to his lectures when at college, had invariably imbibed a love for natural history and physical science. In the morning, when we embarked in the steamer for New York, I was amused at the different aspect of the New Haven scenery from that which I remembered in the autumn of 1841. The East Rock was now covered with snow, all but the bold precipice of columnar basalt. The trees, several of which, espe cially the willows, still retained many of their leaves, were bent down beneath a weight of ice. I never saw so brilliant a spec tacle of the kind, for every bough of the large drooping elms and the smallest twigs of every tree and shrub were hung with trans parent icicles, which, in the bright sunshine, reflected the pris matic colors like the cut-glass drops of a chandelier. As we sailed out of the harbor, which was crowded with vessels, we saw all the ropes of their riggings similarly adorned with crystals of ice. A stormy voyage of nine hours carried us through Long Island 180 CROTON WATERWORKS. [CHAP. XIII. Sound, a distance of ninety miles, to New York. It is only three years since we were last in this city, yet in this short interval we see improvements equaling in importance the increase of the population, which now amounts in round numbers to 440,000 ; New York containing 361,000, and Brooklyn, which is con nected with it "by a ferry, together with Williamsburg 79,000. Among other novelties since 1841, we observe with pleasure the new fountains in the midst of the city supplied from the Croton waterworks, finer than any which I remember to have seen in the center of a city since I was last in Rome. Two of them are now, in spite of an intense frost, throwing up columns of water more than thirty feet high, one opposite the City Hall, and an other in Hudson Square ; but I am told that when we return in the summer we shall see many others in action. A work more akin in magnificence to the ancient and modern Roman aqueducts has not been achieved in our times ; the water having been, brought from the Croton river, a distance of about forty miles, at the expense of about three millions sterling. The health of the city is said to have already gained by greater cleanliness and more wholesome water for drinking ; and I hear from an eminent physician that statistical tables show that cases of infantine cholera and some other complaints have sensibly lessened. The water can be carried to the attics of every house, and many are introducing baths and indulging in ornamental fountains in private gardens. The rate of insurance for fire has been lowered ; and I could not help reflecting as I looked at the moving water, at a season when every pond is covered with ice, how much more security the city must now enjoy than during the great conflagration in the winter of 1835, when there was such a want of water to supply the engines. Only five months ago (July 19th, 1845), another destructive fire broke out near the battery, and when it was nearly extinguished by the aid of the Croton water, a tremendous explosion of saltpeter killed many of the firemen, and scattered the burning materials to great distances, igniting houses in every direction. A belief that more gunpowder still remained imex- ploded checked for a time the approach of the firemen, so tnat a large area was laid waste, and even now some of the ruins are CHAP. XIII.] NEW CHURCHES. 181 smoking, there being a smoldering heat in cellars filled with "dry goods." When the citizens of London rejected the splendid plan which Sir Christopher Wren proposed for its restoration, he declared that they had not deserved a fire, but the New Yorkers seem to have taken full advantage of the late catastrophe. As it was the business part of the city which the flames laid in ruins, we could not expect much display of ornamental architec ture ; but already, before the ashes have done smoking, we see entire streets of substantial houses which have risen to their full height, and the ground has been raised five feet higher than formerly above the river, so a» to secure it from inundations, which has so enhanced its value, that many of the sites alone have sold for prices equal to the value of the buildings which once covered them. Among the new edifices, we were shown some which are fire-proof. Unfortunately, many a fine tree has been burned, and they are still standing without their bark, but the weeping willows bordering the river on the Battery have escaped unsinged. Among the new features of the city we see several fine church es, some built from their foundations, others finished since 1841. The wooden spires of several are elegant, and so solid, as to have all the outward effect of stone. The two most conspicuous of the new edifices are Episcopalian, Trinity and Grace Church. The cost of the former has been chiefly defrayed by funds derived from the rent of houses in New York, bequeathed long since to the Episcopal Church. The expense is said to have equaled that of erecting any four other churches in the city. It is entire ly of stone, a fine-grained sandstone of an agreeable light-brown tint. The top of the steeple is 289 feet from the ground. The effect of the Gothic architecture is very fine, and the Episcopa lians may now boast that of all the ecclesiastical edifices of this continent, they have erected the most beautiful. Its position is admirably chosen, as it forms a prominent feature in Broadway, the principal street, and in another direction looks down Wall- street, the great center of city business. It is therefore seen from great distances in this atmosphere, so beautifully clear even at this season, when every stove is lighted, and when the ther- 182 TRINITY CHURCH. [Cmu>. XIII. mometer has fallen twenty degrees below the freezing point. Where there is so much bright sunshine and no smoke, an archi tect may well be inspired with ambition, conscious that the effect of every pillar and other ornament will be fully brought out with their true lights and shades. The style of the exterior of Trinity Church reminds us of some of our old Gothic churches in Lin colnshire and Northamptonshire. The interior is in equally good taste, the middle aisle sixty-five feet high, but the clustered columns will not have so stately an appearance, nor display their true proportions when the wooden pews have been intro duced round their base. An attempt was made to dispense with these ; but the measure could not be carried ; in fact, much as we may admire the architectural beauty of such a cathedral, one can not but feel that such edifices were planned by the genius of other ages, and adapted to a different form of worship. When the forty-five windows of painted glass are finished, and the white-robed choristers are singing the Cathedral service, to be performed here daily, and when the noble organ peals forth its swelling notes to the arched roof, the whole service will remind us of the days of Romanism, rather than seem suitable to the wants of a Protestant congregation. It is not the form of building best fitted for instructing a large audience. To make the whole in keeping, we ought to throw down the pews, and let processions of priests in their robes of crimson, embroidered with gold, preceded by boys swinging censers, and followed by a crowd of admiring devotees, sweep through the spacious nave. That the whole pomp and splendor of the ancient ceremonial will gradually be restored, with no small portion of its kindred dogmas, is a speculation in which some are said to be actually indulging their thoughts, and is by no means so visionary an idea as half a century ago it might have been thought. In the dio cese of New York, the party which has adopted the views com monly called Puseyite, appears to have gone greater lengths than in any part of England. The newspapers published in various parts of the Union bear testimony to a wide extension of the like movement. We read, for example, a statement of a bishop who has ordered the revolving reading-desk of a curate to CHAP. XIII.] CONVERTS TO ROME. 183 be nailed to the wall, that he might be unable to turn with it toward the altar. The offending clergyman has resigned for the sake of peace, and part of his congregation sympathizing in his views have raised for him a sum of 6000 dollars. In another paper I see a letter of remonstrance from a bishop to an Episco pal clergyman, for attending vespers in a Romanist church, and for crossing himself with holy water as he entered. The epistle finishes with an inquiry if it be true that he had purchased several copies of the Ursuline Manual for young persons. The clergyman, in reply, complains of this petty and annoying inqui sition into his private affairs, openly avows that he is earnestly examining into the history, character, claims, doctrines, and usages of the Church of Rome, and desirous of becoming practi cally acquainted with their forms of worship — that when present for this purpose he had thought it right to conform to the usage of the congregation, &c. It would be easy to multiply anecdotes, and advert to contro versial pamphlets, with which the press is teeming, in proof of the lively interest now taken in similar ecclesiastical questions, so that the reader may conceive the sensation just created here by a piece of intelligence which reached New York the very day of our arrival, and is now going the round of the newspapers, namely, the conversion to the Romish -Church of the Rev. Mr. Newman, of Oxford. Some of his greatest admirers are put to confusion ; others are rejoicing in the hope that the event may prove a warning to many who have departed from the spirit of the Reformation ; and a third party, who gave no credit for sin cerity to the leaders of a movement which they regarded as retrograde, arid who still suspect that they who have joined in it here are actuated by worldly motives, are confessing that they did injustice to the great Oxford tractarian. One of them re marked to me, " We are often told from the pulpit here that we live in an age of skepticism, and that it is the tendency of our times to believe too little rather than too much ; and yet Protest ants of superior talent are now ready to make these great sacri fices for the sake of returning to the faith of Rome !" I might have replied, that reaction seems to be almost as much a princi- 184 THE ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH. [CHAP. XIII. pie of the moral as of the material world, and that we know, from the posthumous writings of one who had lived on intimate terms with the originators of the Tractarian movement in Oxford, that a recoil from doubts derived from the study of the German rationalists, led directly to their departure in an opposite direc tion. " They flung themselves," says Blanco White, writing in 1837, "on a phantom which they called Church. Their plan was to stop all inquiry," and " to restore popery, excluding the pope."* Meanwhile, the attempt to revive the credulity of the middle ages, and to resuscitate a belief in all the miracles of mediaeval saints, has produced, as might naturally have been expected, another reaction, giving strength to a party called the anti-supernaturalists, who entirely reject all the historical evi dence in favor of the Scripture miracles. Their leader in New England, Mr. Theodore Parker, is the author of a work of great erudition, originality, and earnestness (lately reprinted in England), in which, while retaining a belief in the Divine origin of Chris tianity, and the binding nature of its moral code, he abandons the greater part of the evidences on which its truth has hitherto been considered to repose. I heard this author, during my late stay in Boston, preach to a congregation respectable for its numbers and station. Next to the new churches and fountains, the most striking change observable in the streets of New York since 1841, is the introduction of the electric telegraph, the posts of which, about 30 feet high and 100 yards apart, traverse Broadway, and are certainly not ornamental. Occasionally, where the trees interfere, the wires are made to cross the street diagonally. The success ful exertions made to render this mode of communication popular, and so to cheapen it as to bring the advantages of it within the reach of the largest possible number of merchants, newspaper editors, and private individuals, is characteristic of the country. There is a general desire evinced of overcoming space, which seems to inspire all their exertions for extending and improving railways, lines of steam navigation, and these telegraphs. Agri culturists and mercantile men in remote places, are eager to know * Life of J. Blanco White, vol. ii. p. 355, and vol. iii. p. 106. CHAP. XIII.] THE ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH. 185 every where, on the very day of the arrival of an Atlantic mail steamer, the prices of grain, cotton, and other articles in the Euro pean markets, so that they may speculate on equal terms with the citizens of Boston and New York. The politician, who is am bitious, not only of retaining all the states of the Union in one powerful confederation, but of comprising the whole continent under one empire, hails the new invention with delight, and foresees at once its important consequences. Mr. Winthrop well knew the temper of the people whom he addressed, when he congratulated a large meeting, that they might now send intelli gence from one end of the Union to the other with the rapidity of thought, and that they had realized the promise of the King of the Fairies, that he would "put a girdle round about the earth in forty minutes." Already many paragraphs in the newspapers are headed, " Received by lightning, printed by steam," and all seem heartily to welcome the discovery as an instrument of prog ress. When promoting such works, they may exclaim, without boastfulness — " These are imperial arts, and worthy kings." After my return from America, I learned that the length of line completed in 1846, amounted to above 1600 miles, and in 1848 there were more than 5000 miles of wire laid down. In that year one of my English friends sent a message by tele graph to Liverpool, in September, which reached Boston by mail steamer, via Halifax, in twelve days, and was sent on im mediately by electric telegraph to New Orleans, in one day, the answer returning to Boston the day after. Three days were then lost in waiting for the steam-packet, which conveyed the message back to England in twelve days ; "so that the reply reached London on the twenty-ninth day from the sending of the question, the whole distance being more than 10,000 miles, which had been traversed at an average rate exceeding 350 miles a day. It is satisfactory to learn that the telegraph, although so often passing through a wild country, in some places anticipating even the railway, seems never yet to have been injured by the lovers of mischief. The wires have also been often struck by light- 186 THE ELECTRIC TELEGRAPH. [CHAP. XIII ning, so frequent and vivid in this climate, without serious de rangement of the delicate machinery. The telegraph generally in use is the patent of Mr. Morse, whose invention combines the power of printing a message simultaneously with its transmis sion. As the magnetic force becomes extremely feeble when conducted through a great length of wire, Morse employs it sim ply to make a needle vibrate, and so open and close the galvanic circuit placed in each office, where a local battery is set in mo tion, which works the printing machine. The long wires, therefore, may be compared to slender trains of gunpowder, which are made to fire a distant cannon or mine. It is not the battery in Philadelphia which works the instrument in Wash ington, but a battery in the Washington office. This contrivance is obviously nothing more than a new adaptation of the method specified by Mr. Wheatstone, in his patent of June, 1837, for ringing an alarum bell in each station by means of a local bat tery, of which I saw him exhibit experiments in 1837. In September of the same year Mr. Morse invented an in genious mode of printing messages, by causing an endless scroll of paper to roll off one cylinder on to another by means of clock work, the paper being made to pass under a steel pen, which is moved by electro-magnetism. An agent of Mr. Morse explained to me the manner in which the steel pen was made to indent the paper, which is not pierced, but appears as if it had been pressed on by a blunted point, the under surface being raised as in books printed for the blind. If the contact of the pen be continued instead of making a dot, it produces a short or a long line, according to the time of contact. The following is a specimen : — TheElectroMag netic Telegraph. In the latest improvements of the telegraph in England, the magnetic force has been so multiplied by means of several thou sand coils of wire, that they can send it direct, so as to move the CHAP, XIII.] SCHOOLS IN NEW YORK. 187 needle at great distances without the aid of local batteries. The use, however, of this instrument has been comparatively small in Great Britain, the cost of messages being four times as great as in the United States. The population of the State of New York amounts, in the present year (1845) to 2,604,495 souls. Of this number as we learn by the report of the government inspector of schools, no less than 807,200 children, forming almost one-third of the in habitants, have received the benefit of instruction either for the whole or part of the year. Of these, 31,240 attended private schools, and 742,433 the common or public schools of the state. We are also informed in the same official document, that the number of public schools is now 11,003. The whole amount of money received by the school trustees during the year for teachers' wages, and district libraries, was 1,191,697 dollars, equal to about 250,000/. This sum has been raised chiefly by rates, and about one-third of it from the revenue of the school fund, which produces a yearly income of 375,387 dollars. The teachers in the common schools, both male and female, are boarded at the public expense, arid, in addition to their board, receive the following salaries : — Male teachers, during the winter term, 1 4 dollars, 1 6 cents ; and during the summer term, 1 5 dollars, 77 cents per month, equal to about 5Ql. a year. Female teachers, 7 dollars, 37 cents in the winter term, and 6 dollars, 2 cents in the summer term. In some counties, however, the average is stated to be as high as 20, or even 26 dollars per month for the male teachers, and from 9 to 1 1 for the female. There are also district libraries in connection with most of the schools. All these 11,000 schools have been organized on what has been styled in England, even by respectable members in the House of Commons, the infidel or godless plan, which generally means nothing more than that they are not under the manage ment of the clergy. The Roman Catholic bishops and priests command a vast number of votes at the elections in New York, yet they failed, in 1842, to get into their exclusive control that part of the public school money which might fairly be considered 188 SECULAR EDUCATION. [CHAP. XIII. as applicable to the teaching of children of their own denomina tion. Their efforts, however, though fortunately defeated, were attended by some beneficial results. It is obviously the duty of every government which establishes a national system of secular education, to see that no books are used in the schools, containing sectarian views, or in which the peculiar opinions of any sect are treated with marked contempt. The Catholics complained that some of the works put into the hands of children, especially those relating to English history, were written with a strong Protestant bias, and that, while the superstitions of popery and the bigotry of Bloody Mary were pointedly dwelt upon, the per secutions endured by Romanists at the hands of Protestant rulers were overlooked, or slightly glanced at. The expunging of such passages, both in the State of New York and in New England, must have a wholesome tendency to lessen sectarian bitterness, which, if imbibed at an early age, is so difficult to eradicate ; and children thus educated will grow up less prejudiced, and more truly Christian in spirit, than if the Romish or any other clergy had been permitted to obtain the sole arid separate train ing of their minds. I have often mentioned the absence of smoke as a striking and enviable peculiarity of the Atlantic cities. For my own part, I never found the heat of a well-managed stove oppressive, when vessels of water were placed over it for moistening the air by free evaporation ; and the anthracite coal burns brightly in open grates. Even in a moral point of view, I regard freedom from smoke as a positive national gain, for it causes the richer and more educated inhabitants to reside in cities by the side of their poorer neighbors during a larger part of the year, which they would not do if the air and the houses were as much soiled by smoke and soot as Manchester, Birmingham, Leeds, or Sheffield. Here the dress and furniture last longer and look less dingy, flowers and shrubs can be cultivated in town gardens, and all who can afford to move are not driven into the country or some distant suburb. The formation of libraries and scientific and literary institutions, museums, and lectures, and the daily inter course between the different orders of society — in a word, all CHAP. XIII.] IRISH VOTERS. 189 that can advance and refine the mind and taste of a great popu lation, are facilitated by this contact of the rich and poor. In addition, therefore, to the importance given to the rniddb and lower classes by the political institutions of America, I can not but think it was a fortunate geological arrangement for the civil ization of the cities first founded on this continent, that the an- thracitic coal-fie]ds were all placed on the eastern side of the Alleghany mountains, and all the bituminous coal-fields on their western side. One day, when we were dining at the great table of the Carl- ton Hotel, one of the largest and most fashionable establishments of the kind in New York, we were informed by an American friend, that a young man and woman sitting opposite to us were well known to him as work-people from a factory near Boston. They scarcely spoke a word, but were conforming carefully to the conventional manners of those around them. Before we left New York, we witnessed an unforeseen effect of the abundance of waste water recently poured into the city through the new Croton aqueduct. In the lower streets near the river the water in the open gutters had frozen in the course of the night, and, next morning, the usual channels being blocked up with ice, a stream poured down the middle of the street, and was in its turn frozen there, so that when I returned one night from a party, I wished I had been provided with skates, so continuous was the sheet of ice. Then came a thaw, and the water of the melted ice poured into the lower stories of many houses. The authorities are taking active measures to provide in future against the recurrence of this evil. I suggested to one of my friends here that they had omitted, among their numerous improvements, to exclude the pigs from the streets. "It is not possible," said he, " for they all have votes ; I mean their Irish owners have, and they turn the scale in the elections for mayor and other city officers. If we must have a war," he added, " about Oregon, it will at least be at tended with one blessing — the stopping of this incessant influx of hordes of ignorant adventurers, who pour in and bear down our native population. Whether they call themselves ' the true 190 NATIVISM. [CHAP. XIII. sons of Erin,' or the ' noble sons of Germany,' they are the dupes and tools of our demagogues." He then told me that in the last presidential election he had been an inspector, and had rejected many fraudulent votes of newly arrived emigrants, brought to the poll without letters of naturalization, and he had no doubt that some other inspectors had been less scrupulous when the voters were of their own political party. " But for the foreign vote," he affirmed, " Clay would have been elected." " Have you then joined the native American party ?" " No ; because, by sepa rating from the Whigs, they have weakened the good cause, and nativism being chiefly anti-Irish, too often degenerates into relig ious bigotry', or into a mere anti-popery faction." CHAPTER XIV. New York to Philadelphia. — Scenery in New Jersey. — War about Oregon, — Protectionist Theories. — Income Tax and Repudiation. — Recrimina tions against British Aggrandizement. — Irish Quarter and fraudulent Votes. — Washington. — Congress and Annexation of Texas. — General Cass for War. — Winthrop for Arbitration. — Inflated Eloquence. — Su preme Court. — Slavery in District of Columbia. — Museum, Collection of Corals. — Sculpture from Palenque. — Conversations with Mr. Fox. — A Residence at Washington not favorable to a just Estimate of the United States. — False Position of Foreign Diplomatists. Dec. 9, 1845. — LEFT New York for Philadelphia by railway. When crossing the ferry to New Jersey, saw Long Island and Staten Island covered with snow. Between New York and New ark, New Jersey, there is a deep cutting through a basaltic 01 greenstone rock, a continuation of the mass which forms the columnar precipices, called the Palisades, on the Hudson river, above New York. From the jagged face of the cliffs in this cut-, ting, were hanging some of the largest icicles I ever beheld, re minding me of huge stalactites pendent from the roofs of limestone caverns in Europe. In New Jersey we passed over a gently undulating surface of country, formed of red marl and sandstone, resembling in appear ance, and of about the same geological age, as the new red sand stone (trias) of England. The soil in the fields is of a similar red color, and all signs of recent clearings, such as the stumps of trees, have nearly disappeared. The copses, formed of a second growth of wood, and the style of the fences round the fields, gave an English aspect to the country. We went by Newark, Eliza- bethtown, Princeton, Trenton, Bordentown, and Burlington. In some of these places, as at Elizabethtown, houses and churches have grown up round the railway ; and we passed through the middle of Burlington, a great source of convenience to the natives, and of amusement to the passengers, but implying a slow rate of traveling. Hereafter, to enable express trains to go at full speed from north to south, there must be branch lines outside the towns. 192 WAR ABOUT OREGON, [CHAP. XIV. As we passed Burlington, a fellow passenger told us that in an Episcopalian college established there, called St. Mary's Hall, were a hundred young girls, whom he called " the holy innocents," as sembled from every part of the Union. Eighteen of them had. in September last, taken their degrees in arts, receiving, from the hands of the Bishop of New Jersey, diplomas, headed by an en graving of the Holy Virgin and Child, and issued " in the name of the Father, Son, and Holy Ghost." The session had ended with the ceremony of laying and consecrating the corner-stone of "the chapel of the Holy Innocents for the use of the scholars of St. Mary's Hall." Whether we took up a newspaper, or listened to conversation in the cars, we found that the Oregon question, and a rupture with England, were the all-engrossing topic of political specula tion. The democratic party are evidently intoxicated with their success in having achieved the annexation of Texas, and are bent on future schemes of territorial aggrandizement. Some talk of gaining the whole of Oregon, others all Mexico. I heard one fellow-traveler say modestly, " We are going on too fast ; but Mexico must in time be ours." On arriving at Philadelphia. I found some of the daily journals written in a tone well-fitted to create a war-panic, counting on the aid of France in the event of a struggle with Great Britain ; boasting that if all the eastern cities were laid in ashes by an English fleet, they would rebuild them in five years, and extinguish all the debts caused by the war in thirty years ; whereas England, borrowing as in the last war many hundred millions sterling, must become bankrupt or permanently crippled with taxation. I asked an acquaintance, whether the editor of such articles secretly wished for war, or wanted to frighten his readers into a pacific policy. " He has lately gone over," said he, " to the protectionist party. Having made large purchases of shares in an iron company, and fearing that, should peace continue, the free-traders would lower the tariff, he patriotically hopes for a war with England to enable him to make a fortune. He is one of those philanthropic monop olists who would have joined in a toast given some years ago at a public dinner by one of our merchants, < May the wants of all CHAP. XIV ] INCOME TAX. 193 nations increase, and may they be supplied by Pennsylvania.' " " But will his war dreams be realized, think you ?" " Probably •Hiot ; yet the mere anticipation of such a contingency is doing- mischief, checking commercial enterprise, causing our state bonds to fall in value, and awakening evil passions. You will scarcely believe that I have heard men of respectable standing in the world declare, that if a war breaks out, we shall at least be able to sponge out our state debt !" I found that the income tax laid on to pay the interest of this debt, is weighing heavily on Pennsylvania, and many a citizen is casting a wistful glance across the Delaware, at the untaxed fields and mansions of New Jersey. Some manage to evade half their burdens by taking houses in that state, and resorting in the winter season to Philadelphia for the sake of society. One of the Philadelphians assured me, that he and others paid sixteen per cent, "on their income for state taxes ; and after honestly respond ing to all the inquisitorial demands of the collectors, they had the mortification of thinking that men who are less conscientious escape half the impost. " Capital," he said, « is deserting this city, and some thriving store-keepers, whom you knew here in 1842, have transferred their business to New York. In your ' Travels in America,' you were far too indulgent to the Petm- sylvanian Whigs, who promoted the outlay of government money on public works, which has been our ruin. The wealthy Ger man farmers and democrats opposed that expenditure ; and it is not German ignorance, as some Whigs pretend, which has en tailed debt and disgrace on this state, but the extravagance of the influential merchants, who were chiefly Whigs. You see by the papers that the county of Lancaster, is 50,000 dollars in ar- rear in the payment of state taxes, and the punishment inflicted by government is to withhold the school-money from these de faulters, thereby prolonging the evil, if it be ignorance which has dulled their moral sense." The reluctance to resort to coercive measures, on the part of the men in power, for fear of endangering their popularity, is striking ; and John Bull would smile at a circular just issued and addressed by the state treasurer to counties, some of which VOL, i. — I 194 BRITISH AGGRANDIZ EMENT. [CHAP. XIV. are three years in arrear. He praises others for their cheerful promptness in bearing their fair share of the public liabilities, and exhorts the rest to follow their good example, for the honoj* arid credit of the Commonwealth. The necessity of compulsory measures is gently hinted at as a possible contingency, should they continue to be defaulters. As a proof, however, that more cogent methods of persuasion are sometimes resorted to, I see advertisements of the sale of city property for the discharge of taxes ; and it is fair to presume, that patriotic exhortations have not always been without effect, or they would be thought too ridiculous to be employed. I observed to a friend, that when I left the New Englanders, they were decidedly averse to war about Oregon. " Yes," he rejoined, « but they are equally against free trade ; whereas, the people in the West, who are talking so big about fighting for Oregon, are in favor of a low tariff and more trade with En- O ' gland, which would make war impossible. Which of these two, think you, is practically the peace party ?" In the leading articles of several of the papers, I read some spirited recriminations in answer to English censures on the annexation of Texas. Its independence, they say, had been acknowledged by Great Britain, and its inhabitants had volun tarily joined the Union. Some journals talk of following " the classical example of the mother-country," and allude to the con quest of Sinde, and the intended " annexation of Borneo." A passage is also cited from a recent article in one of the leading London journals, to the following effect : — " That as the Punjab must eventually be ours, the sooner we take possession of it the better, and the less blood and treasure will be spent in saving from anarchy the richest part of India." But it is easier thus to recriminate than to reply to the admirable protest published in the beginning of the present year (January, 1845), by a con vention of delegates from various and opposite political parties in Massachusetts, which set forth, in strong terms, the unjustifiable manner in which Texas was originally filched from Mexico, and the tendency of such annexation to extend and uphold slavery, and " probably to lead to a Mexican war." CHAP. XIV.] FRAUDULENT VOTES. 195 During our stay in Philadelphia, we heard much regret ex pressed at the establishment of what is called here an Irish .quarter, entailing, for the first time, the necessity of keeping up a more expensive police. In the riots of May 6, 1844, many lives were lost, and a party has been formed of native Americans to resist what they call " the papal garrison." Although much sectarian feeling, mixed with the prejudice of race, may have been betrayed against the Irish Romanists, I find it impossible not to sympathize with the indignation cherished here in regard to the interference of aliens with the elections, and the danger which threatens the liberties of the country from fraudulent vot ing. Originally a residence of five years was required to confer the electoral franchise on a new settler, and the time did not begin to count till after a regular notification of his intention to settle and acquire the rights of citizenship, accompanied by for swearing his allegiance to any other sovereignty. The federalists imprudently extended the term to sixteen years, in the president ship of John Adams, which excluded more than half of the popu lation in some newly peopled districts. The original term of five years after registration was again restored in Jefferson's president ship, and continued till the contest between John Quincy Adarns and Jackson, when Mr. Buchanan carried his proposition that, instead of registration, two witnesses might depose on parole that the candidate for naturalization had resided five years. This regulation has led to much fraud and perjury ; and cases so flagrant have occurred, that judges have been cashiered for con niving at them. The same rules, however, are not binding in all state elections, for in Virginia, at present, the right of citizen ship demands a residence of seven years, while in Michigan, new comers can vote two years after their arrival. How many of the stories related of fraudulent voting may be true, I can not pretend to decide ; but I was amused at their number and variety. It came out, I am told, in evidence on a late trial, that convicts had been carried to the poll at New York, and then taken back to prison ; and that the dexterity of those who manage the Irish vote often consists in making Paddy believe that he is really entitled to the franchise, One of these dupe? 196 HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. [CHAP. XIV. having voted several times over for one candidate, was at length objected to, and observed with 'naivete, " that it was hard that his vote should at last be challenged, when so many inspectors had taken it before that same day." An emigrant ship arrived at Newcastle, on the Delaware, in the heat of an election for governor ; the Irish emigrants were asked if they would support the democratic candidate. " We are all for the opposition," they replied ; and the ingenuity of the canvasser was taxed to make them comprehend that the Ins in America, corresponded in their politics with the Outs in Great Britain. Such anecdotes prove indisputably that the purity of the elec tions is at least impeached, and it must also be borne in mind that the system of ballot precludes all scrutiny after the election is over. Dec. 13. Washington. — Went into the House of Represent atives ; the front seats in the gallery are reserved for ladies. We found the member for Connecticut, Mr. Rockwell, on his legs, delivering what seemed to me an admirable speech against the annexation of Texas, especially that part of its new constitution which prohibited the legislature from taking steps toward the future abolition of slavery. Some of the representatives were talking, others writing, none listening. The question was evi dently treated as one gone by — mere matter of history, which the course of events had consigned to the vault of all the Capulets. Nevertheless, a feeling of irritation and deep disgust is pervading the minds of the anti-slavery party at this sudden accession of new territory, open to a slave population. A powerful reaction has begun to display itself, so that the incorporation of Texas into the Union may eventually be attended Math consequences most favorable to the good cause, rousing the whole north to make a stand against the future extension of slavery. Mr. Winthrop has hailed this more hopeful prospect in the happiest strain of eloquence, addressing " the lone star of Texas," as it was called, in the words of Milton : — '; Fairest of stars, last in the train of night, If rather thou belong'st not to the dawn." Crossing the Rotunda, we passed into the Senate, and heard General Cass, of Michigan, delivering a set speech on the Oregon CHAP. XIV.] ARBITRATION. 197 question. The recent acquisition of Texas, which we had heard condemned in the other house as a foul blot on their national policy, was boasted of by him as a glorious triumph of freedom. He drew an animated picture of the aggrandizing spirit of Great Britain with her 150 millions of subjects, spoke of her arrogance and pride, the certainty of a war, if they wished to maintain their just rights, and the necessity of an immediate armament. "Great Britain," he said, "might be willing to submit the Oregon question to arbitration, but the crowned heads, whom she would propose as arbiters, would not be impartial, for they would cherish anti-republican feelings." I thought the style of this oration better than its spirit, and it was listened to with atten tion ; but in spite of the stirring nature of the theme, none of the senators betrayed any emotion. When he sat down, others followed, some of whom read ex tracts from the recently delivered speeches of Sir Robert Peel and Lord John Russell on the Oregon affair, commenting freely and fairly upon them, and pointing out that there was nothing in the tone of the British Government, nor in the nature of their demands, which closed the door against an amicable adjustment. I came away from this debate much struck with the singular posture of affairs ; for the executive and its functionaries seem to be doing their worst to inflame popular- passions, while the legis lature, chosen by universal suffrage, is comparatively calm, and exhibits that sense of a dangerous responsibility, which a presi dent and his cabinet might rather have been expected to display. In reference to one of the arguments in General Cass's speech, Mr. Winthrop soon afterward moved in the House of Represent atives (Dec. 19, 1845), "That arbitration does not necessarily involve a reference to crowned heads ; and if a jealousy of such a reference is entertained in any quarter, a commission of able and dispassionate citizens, either from the two countries con cerned, or from the world at large, offers itself as an obvious and unobj ectionable alternative. ' ' A similar proposition emanated simultaneously, and without concert, from the English Cabinet, showing that they were regardless of precedents, and relied on the justice of their cause. 198 RECRIMINATION. [CHAP. XIV. Although it was declined, the mere fact of a great nation having waived all punctilious etiquette, and offered to settle a point at issue by referring the question to private citizens of high charac ter and learned in international law, proves that the world is advancing in civilization, and that higher principles of morality are beginning to gain ground in the intercourse between nations. " All who ought to govern," said a member of Congress to me, " are of one mind as to Lord Aberdeen's overture ; but they who do govern here, will never submit to arbitration." The Senate consists at present of fifty-nine members, and will soon be augmented by two from Texas and two from Iowa, the Union consisting now of twenty-seven states, with a population of about twenty millions. The appearance of the members of the House of Representa tives is gentlemanlike, although I doubt not that the scenes of violence and want of decorum described by many travelers, are correct pictures of what they witnessed. In this nation of read ers they are so sensitive to foreign criticism, that amendment may be confidently looked for. At this moment, the papers, by way of retaliation, are amusing their readers with extracts from a debate in the Canada House of Assembly. The following may serve as an example : — " Our Canadian friends occasionally read us a lecture on courtesy and order, we therefore cite from a report of their legislative proceedings, what we presume they intend as a model for our imitation. Mr. De B. appealed to the chair to stop the member for Quebec, and threatened if he was not called to order, that he must go over and pull his nose ; at which Mr. A. rejoined, ' Come and do it, you scoundrel !' " Another exam ple of recrimination that I have lately seen, consisted in placing in two parallel columns, first an extract from the leading article of the London Times, rating the Americans in good set terms for their rudeness to each other in debate, and coarse abuse of England ; arid, secondly, an account given by the same journal of a disorderly discussion in the House of Commons on an Irish question, in which, among other incidents, a young member of the aristocracy (intoxicated let us hope) rose in the midst of the hubbub, and imitated the crowing of a cock. CHAP. XIV.] INFLATED ELOQUENCE. 199 A member of Congress, who frequented, when in London, the gallery of the House of Commons, tells me he was struck with what seemed an affectation of rusticity, members lolling in loung ing attitudes on the benches with their hats on, speaking with their hands thrust into their breeches pockets, and other acts, as if in defiance of restraint. The English method of coughing down a troublesome member is often alluded to here, and has, on one occasion, been gravely recommended for adoption, as a par liamentary usage which might advantageously be imitated, rather than the limitation of each speaker to one hour, a rule now in force, which has too often the effect of making each orator think it due to himself to occupy the house for his full term. It would be impossible to burlesque or caricature the ambitious style of certain members of Congress, especially some who have risen from humble stations, and whose schooling has been in the back-woods. A grave report, drawn up in the present session by a member for Illinois, as chairman of the Post-office Commit tee, may serve as an example. After speaking of the American republic as " the infant Hercules," and the extension of their imperial dominion over the "northern continent and oriental seas," he exclaims, " the destiny of our nation has now become revealed, and great events, quickening in the womb of time, reflect their clearly-defined shadows into our very eye-balls. " Oh. why does a cold generation frigidly repel ambrosial gifts like these, or sacrilegiously hesitate to embrace their glowing and resplendent fate ? " Must this backward pull of the government never cease, and the nation tug forever beneath a dead weight, which trips its heels at every stride ?" From the Senate House we went to another part of the Capi tol, to hear Mr. Webster plead a cause before the Judges of the Supreme Court. These judges wear black gowns, and are, 1 believe, the only ones in the United States who have a costume. The point at issue was most clearly stated, namely, whether the city of New York had a legal right to levy a tax of one dollar on every passenger entering that port, who had never before visited any port of the Union. The number of emigrants being 200 WASHINGTON. [CHAP. XIV. great, no less than 100,000 dollars had been annually raised by this impost, the money being applied chiefly as an hospital fund. It was contended that the Federal Government alone had the right of imposing duties on commerce, in which light this passen ger tribute ought to be viewed. The Court, however, ruled otherwise. It was pointed out to me, as a remarkable proof of the ascend ency of the democratic party in the Federal Government for many years past, that only one of all the judges now on the bench had been nominated by the Whigs. One day, as we were walking down Pennsylvania Avenue with Mr. Winthrop, we met a young negro woman, who came up to him with a countenance full of pleasure, saying it was several years since she had seen him, and greeting him with such an affectionate warmth of expression, that I began to con trast the stiffness and coldness of the Anglo-Saxon mariners with the genial flow of feeling of this southern race. My companion explained to me, that she was a very intelligent girl, and was grateful to him for an act of kindness he had once had an oppor tunity of showing her. I afterward learnt, from some other friends to whom I told this anecdote, that, three years before, Mr. Winthrop and a brother member of Congress from the north had been lodging in the house of this girl's mistress, and hearing that she was sentenced to be whipped for some offense, had both of them protested they would instantly quit the house if the mis tress persevered. She had yielded, and at length confessed that she had been giving way to a momentary fit of temper. Washington is situated in the district of Columbia, comprising an area of 1 0 0 square miles, borrowed from the neighboring states to form an independent jurisdiction by itself. Several attempts have been made to declare it free, but hitherto in vain, thanks to the union of the northern democrats and southern slave-own ers, aided by the impracticable schemes of the abolitionists. The view of the city and the river Potomac from the hill on which the Capitol stands is fine ; but, in spite of some new pub lic edifices built in a handsome style of Greek architecture, we are struck with the small progress made in three years since we CHAP. XIV.] MUSEUM. 201 were last here. The vacant spaces are not filling up with private houses, according to the original plan, so that the would-be me tropolis wears still the air of some projector's scheme which has failed. The principal hotels, however, have improved, and we were not annoyed, as when last here, by the odors left in the room by the colored domestics, who had no beds, but slept any where about the stairs or passages, without changing their clothes. With similar habits, in a hot climate, no servants of any race, whether free or slave, African or European, would be endurable. In the public museum at the Patent Office I was glad to see a fine collection of objects of natural history, brought here by the late Exploring Expedition, commanded by Captain Wilkes. Among other treasures is a splendid series of recent corals, a good description of which, illustrated by plates, will soon be publish ed by Mr. Dana, at the expense of Government. These zoo phytes are accompanied by masses of solid limestone, occasionally including shells, recently formed in coral reefs, like those men tioned by Mr. Darwin as occurring in the South Seas, some as hard as marble, others consisting of conglomerates of pebbles and calcareous sand. In several of the specimens I saw the imbedded zoophytes and shells projecting from the weathered surface, as do the petrifactions in many an ancient limestone where they have resisted disintegration more than the matrix. Other fragments were as white and soft as chalk ; one in particular, a cubic foot in bulk, brought from one of the Sandwich Islands, might have been mistaken for a piece of Shakspeare's Cliff, near Dover. It reminded me that an English friend, a professor of political econ omy, met me about fifteen years ago on the beach at Dover, after he had just read my " Principles of Geology," and exclaimed, " Show me masses of pure white rock, like the substance of these cliffs, in the act of growing in the ocean over areas as large as France or England, and I will believe all your theory of modern causes." Since that time we have obtained data for inferring that the growth of corals, and the deposition of chalk- like calcareous mud, is actually going on over much wider areas than the whole of Europe, so that I am now entitled to claim my incredulous friend as a proselyte. !* 202 SCULPTURp; FROM PALENQUE. [CHAP. XIV. In one of the glass cases of the Museum I saw the huge skull of the Megatherium, with the remains of other extinct fossil animals found in Georgia — a splendid donation presented by Mr. Hamilton Couper. In another part of the room were objects of antiquarian interest, and among the rest some sculptured stories from the ruins of Palenque, inscribed with the hieroglyphic or picture-writing of the Aborigines, with which Stephen's lively work on Central America, and the admirable illustrations of Catherwood, had made us familiar. The camp-chest of General Washington, his sword, the uniform worn by him when he re signed his commission, and even his stick, have been treasured up as relics in this national repository. If the proposition lately made in the public journals, to purchase Washington's country residence and negro-houses at Mount Vernon, and to keep them forever in the state in which he left them, should be carried into effect, it would not only be a fit act of hero-worship, but in the course of time this farm would become a curious antiquarian monument, showing to after generations the state of agriculture at the period when the Republic was founded, and how the old Virginian planters and their slaves lived in the eighteenth century. Before leaving Washington we called, with Mr. Winthrop, at the White House, the residence of the President. A colored servant in livery came to the door, and conducted us to the re ception-room, which is well-proportioned and well-furnished, not in sumptuous style, but without any affectation of republican plainness. We were politely received by Mrs. Polk, her hus band being engaged on public business. I was afterward intro duced to General Scott, to Captain Wilkes, recently returned from his expedition to the South Seas, to Mr. Bancroft, Secretary of the Navy, and called on our minister, Mr. Pakenham, and our old friends, M. and Madame de Gerolt, the Prussian minister and his wife. I also examined a fine collection of fossils belonging to Mr. Markoe, who has taken an active part in founding an insti tution here for the promotion of science arid natural history. The day before our departure I had a long and agreeable conversation with our ex-minister, Mr. Fox, whose sudden and unexpected death happened a few months later. I told him that some En- CHAP. XIV.] CONVERSATIONS WITH MR. FOX. 203 glish travelers wondered that I should set out on a long tour when the English and American papers were descanting on the proba bility of a war. He said, that "when Macleod was detained prisoner in 1841, there was really some risk, because he might have been hanged any day by the New Yorkers, in spite of the desire of the Federal Government to save him ; but now there is no war party in England, and all reasonable men here, includ ing the principal officers of the army and navy, are against it. Some of the western people may be warlike, for there are many patriots who believe that it is their destiny to rise on the ruins of the British empire ; but when the President, according to treaty, shall have given notice of a partition of Oregon, there will be time for negotiation. If one of two disputants threatens to knock the other down eighteen months hence, would you appre hend immediate mischief?" "They are not arming," said I. "No augury can be drawn from that fact," he replied; "the people are against large peace establishments, knowing that there is no fear of hostile attacks from without unless they provoke them, and satisfied that their wealth and population are annually increasing. They are full of courage, and would develop extraor dinary resources in a war, however much they would suffer at the first onset." We then conversed freely on the future prospects of civiliza tion in the North American continent. He had formed far less sanguine expectations than I had, but confessed, that though he had resided so many years in the country, he knew little or noth ing of the northern states, especially of New England. When I dwelt on the progress I had witnessed, even in four years, in the schools and educational institutions, the increase of readers and of good books, and the preparations making for future scien tific achievements, he frankly admitted that he had habitually contemplated the Union from a somewhat unfavorable point of view. I observed to him that Washington was not a metropo lis, like London, nor even like Edinburgh or Dublin, but a town which had not thriven, in spite of government patronage. The members of Congress did not bring their families to it, because it \vould often take them away from larger cities, where they were 204 FOREIGN DIPLOMATISTS. [CHAP. XIVr. enjoying more refined and intellectual society. It was as if the Legislature of the British empire, representing not only England, Scotland, and Ireland, but Canada, Newfoundland, the West Indies, Australia, the Cape, and all the other dependencies of the British crown, were to meet in some third-rate town. Nor even then would the comparison be a fair one, because if there be one characteristic more than another which advantageously distin guishes three-fourths of the American population, it is the high social, intellectual, and political condition, relatively speaking, of the working classes. The foreign diplomatist residing in Wash ington lives within the borders of the slave territory, where the laborers are more degraded, and perhaps less progressive, than in any European state. Besides, the foreign embassador, in his offi cial and political capacity, too often sees exposed the weak side of the constitution of the Union, and has to deplore the power- lessness of the federal executive to carry out its own views, and to control the will of thirty independent states, or as many im- peria in imperio. Just when he may have come to an under standing with the leading statesmen on points of international law, so that his negotiations in any other metropolis would have been brought to a successful issue, he finds that the real difficul ties are only beginning. It still remains to be seen whether the government is strong enough to contend with the people, or has the will so to act, or whether it will court popularity by yielding to their prejudices, or even exciting their passions. Such is at this moment the position of affairs, and of our minister at Wash ington. 'Library ^-^ California CHAPTER XV. Washington to Richmond. — Legislature of Virginia in Session. — Substitu tion of White for Slave Labor. — Progress of Negro Instruction. — Slave- dealers. — Kindness to Negroes. — Coal of Oolitic Period near Richmond. — Visit to the Mines. — Upright Fossil Trees. — Deep Shafts, and Thick ness of Coal Seams. — Explosion of Gas. — Natural Coke. — Resemblance of the more modern Coal-measures to old Carboniferous Rocks. — Whites working with free Negroes in the Mines. Dec, 16, 1845. — FROM Washington we went to Richmond, and were glad to find that the great southern line of railway from Acquia Creek had been completed since we were last here, by which we escaped twelve miles of jolting over a rough road, de scribed with so much humor by Dickens. At Richmond T went into the Supreme Court of Appeal, and, as I entered, heard the counsel who was pleading, cite a recent decision of the English Court of Chancery as bearing on his case. The Houses of Legislature of Virginia were in session, and I heard part of a debate on a proposed railway from Baltimore to the valley of the Great Kanawha, in Western Virginia. Much jealousy was expressed lest the metropolis of Maryland, instead of Richmond, should reap the chief fruits of this project, at which I was not surprised ; for Virginia, with a population of 1,100,000 inhabitants, has no towns larger than Richmond and Norfolk. Beverly, and the early writers on this state, say, " that the peo ple were prevented from congregating in large towns by the en joyment of an extensive system of river navigation, which ena bled merchant ships to sail up every where to the warehouses of each planter and receive their freight. Hence there was less activity and enterprise, and a want of the competition, which the collected life in cities promotes."^ One of the senators, whom I had met the day before at a din ner party, conversed with me on the publication of the geological * See "Graham's History," vol. i. p. 145. 206 VIRGINIA. [Cmp. XV. maps and reports of the State Survey, which have been admira bly executed under the direction of Professor W. B. Rogers. The division of legislative duties between a central power, such as I had just seen deliberating at Washington, and the separate and independent states, such as that now in simultaneous action here at Richmond, seems the only form fitted for a widely ex tended empire, if the representative system is to prevail. The present population of the different states may be compared, on an average, to that of English counties, or, at least, to colonies of the British empire. At the same period of the year, when each is managing its own affairs in regard to internal improvements — schools, colleges, police, railways, canals, and direct taxes — the central parliament is discussing questions of foreign policy — the division of Oregon; the state of the army and navy, questions of free trade, and a high or low tariff. By aid of railways, steamers, and the electric telegraph, it might be possible to conduct all the business of the twenty-seven states at Washington, but not with the same efficiency or econ omy ; for, in that case, the attention of the members of the two houses of Congress would be distracted by the number and variety of subjects submitted to them, and the leading statesmen would be crushed by the weight of official and parliamentary business. While at Richmond, we saw some agreeable and refined so ciety in the families of the judges of the Supreme Court and other lawyers ; but there is little here of that activity of mind and feeling for literature and science which strikes one in the best circles in New England. Virginia, however, seems to be rousing herself, and preparing to make an effort to enlarge her resources, by promoting schools and internal improvements. Her pride has been hurt at seeing how rapidly her old political ascendency has passed away, and how, with so large and rich a territory, she has been outstripped in the race by newer states, especially Ohio. She is unwilling to believe that her negro population is the chief obstacle to her onward march, yet can not shut her eyes to the fact that the upper or hilly region of the Alleghanies, where the whites predominate, has been ad vancing in a more rapid ratio than the eastern counties. The CHAP. XV.] WHITE AND SLAVE LABOR. 207 whites who live west of the Blue Ridge are about equal in number to those who live east of it ; but the eastern division, or lower country, owns a greater number of slaves, and in right of them has more votes. The western men are talking loudly of a convention to place them on a more equal footing, some even desiring a separation into two states. There has also been a suggestion, that it might be well to allow a single county to declare itself free, without waiting for the emancipation of others. Among other signs of approaching change, I am told that several new settlers from the north have made a practical demonstration that slave labor is less profitable, even east of the Blue Ridge, than that of free whites. As we sailed down the Potomac from Washington, a landed proprietor of Fairfax county pointed out to me some estates in Virginia, on the right bank of the river, in which free had been substituted for slave labor since I was here in 1841. Some farmers came from New Hampshire and Con necticut, and, having bought the land at five dollars an acre, tilled it with their own hands and those of their family, aided in some cases by a few hired whites. To the astonishment of the surrounding planters, before the end of four years, they had raised the value of the soil from five to forty dollars per acre, having introduced for the first time a rotation of corn and green crops, instead of first exhausting the soil, and then letting it lie fallow for years to recover itself. They have also escaped the ruinous expense of feeding large bodies of negroes in those seasons when the harvest is deficient. They do not pretend to indulge in that hospitality for which the old Virginians and North Carolinians were celebrated, who often mortgaged their estates to pay the annual salary of their overseer, till he himself became the pro prietor. The master, in that case, usually migrated with part of his negroes to settle farther south or southwest, introducing into the new states more civilized habits and manners than would have belonged to them had they been entirely peopled by adven turers from the north or from Europe. On Sunday, December the 21st, we attended service in a handsome new Episcopal church, called St. Paul's, and heard the rector announce to the congregation that a decision had just 203 NEGRO EDUCATION. [CHAP. XV. been come to (by a majority of all the proprietors of the church, as I was afterward informed), that one of the side galleries should henceforth be set apart exclusively for people of color. This resolution, he said, had been taken in order that they and their servants might unite in the worship of the same God, as they hoped to enter hereafter together into his everlasting king dom, if they obeyed his laws. I inquired whether they would not have done more toward raising the slaves to a footing of equality in the house of prayer, if they had opened the same galleries to negroes and whites. In reply, I was assured that, in the present state of social feeling, the colored people would gain less by such joint occupancy, because, from their habitual deference to the whites, they would yield to them all the front places. There were few negroes present ; but I am told that, if I went to the Baptist or Methodist churches, I should find the galleries quite full. There are several Sunday schools here for negroes, and it is a singular fact thai, in spite of the law against instructing slaves, many of the whites have been taught to read by negro nurses. A large proportion of the slaves and free colored people here are of mixed breed. The employment of this class as in-door servants in cities arises partly from the in terest taken in them by their white parents, who have manu- mited them and helped them to rise in the world, and partly because the rich prefer them as domestic servants, for their ap pearance is more agreeable, and they are more intelligent. Whether their superiority is owing to physical causes, and that share of an European organization which they inherit in right of one of their parents, or whether it may be referred to their early intercourse and contact with the whites, — in other words, to a better education, — is still matter of controversy. Several Virginian planters have spoken to me of the negro race as naturally warm-hearted, patient, and cheerful, grateful for benefits, and forgiving of injuries. They are also of a relig ious temperament, bordering on superstition. Even those who think they ought forever to remain in servitude, give them a character which leads one to the belief that steps ought long ago to have been taken toward their gradual emancipation, CHAP. XV.] NEGRO SLAVERY. 209 Had some legislative provision been made with this view before the annexation of Texas, a period being fixed after which all the children born in this state should be free, that new territory would have afforded a useful outlet for the black population of Virginia, and whites would have supplied the vacancies which are now filled up by the breeding of negroes. In the absence of such enactments, Texas prolongs the duration of negro slavery in Virginia, aggravating one of its worst consequences, the in ternal slave trade, and keeping up the price of negroes at home. They are now selling for 500, 750, and 1000 dollars each, ac cording to their qualifications. There are always dealers at Richmond, whose business it is to collect slaves for the southern market ; and, until a gang is ready to start for the south, they are kept here well fed, and as cheerful as possible. In a court of the jail, where they are lodged, I see them every day amusing themselves by playing at quoits. How much this traffic is ab horred, even by those who encourage it, is shown by the low social position held by the dealer, even when he has made a large for tune. When they conduct gangs of fifty slaves at a time across the mountains to the Ohio river, they usually manacle some of the men, but on reaching the Ohio river, they have no longer any fear of their attempting an escape, and they then unshackle them. That the condition of slaves in Virginia is steadily improving, all here seem agreed. One of the greatest evils olf the system is the compulsory separation of members of the same family. Since my arrival at Richmond, a case has come to my knowl edge, of a negro who petitioned a rich individual to purchase him, because he was going to be sold, and was in danger of being sent to New Orleans, his wife and child remaining in Virginia. But such instances are far less common than would be imagined, owing to the kind feeling of the southern planters toward their " own people," as they call them. Even in extreme cases, where the property of an insolvent is brought to the hammer, public opinion acts as a powerful check against the parting of kindred. We heard of two recent cases, one in which the pa rents were put up without their children, and the mother being in tears, no one would bid till the dealer put the children up 210 KINDNESS TO NEGROES. [CHAP. XV. also. They then sold very well. Another, where the dealer was compelled, in like manner, to sell a father and son to gether. I learned with pleasure an anecdote, from undoubted authority, very characteristic of the indulgence of owners of the higher class of society here toward their slaves. One of the judges of the Supreme Court at Richmond, having four or five supernumerary negroes in his establishment, proposed to them to go to his plantation in the country. As they had acquired town habits, they objected, and begged him instead to look out for a good master who would carry them to a city farther south, where they might enjoy a warm climate. The judge accordingly made his arrangements, and, for the sake of securing the desired con ditions, was to receive for each a price below their market value. Just as they were about to leave Richmond for Louisiana, one of the women turned faint-hearted, at which all the rest lost courage ; for their local and personal attachments are very strong, although they seem always ready to migrate cheerfully to any part of the world with their owners. The affair ended in the good-natured judge having to repurchase them, paying the dif ference of price between the sum agreed upon for each, and what they would have fetched at an auction. Great sacrifices are often made from a sense of duty, by re taining possession of inherited estates, which it would be most desirable to sell, and which the owners can not part with, because they feel it would be wrong to abandon the slaves to an un known purchaser. We became acquainted with the family of a widow, who had six daughters and no son to take on himself the management of a plantation, always a responsible, and often a very difficult undertaking. It was felt by all the relatives and neighbors to be most desirable that the property, situated in a remote part of the country, near the sea, should be sold, in order that the young ladies and their mother should have the benefit of society in a large town. They wished it themselves, being in very moderate circumstances, but were withheld by conscien tious motives from leaving a large body of dependents, whom they had known from childhood, and who could scarcely hope to be treated with the same indulgence by strangers. CHAP. XV.] COAL OF OOLITIC PERIOD. 211 I had stopped at Richmond on my way south, for the sake of exploring geologically some coal mines, distant about thirteen miles from the city to the westward. Some of the largest and most productive of these, situated in Chesterfield County, belong to an English company, and one of them was under the manage ment of Mr. A. F. Gifford, formerly an officer in the British army, and married to a Virginian lady. At their agreeable residence, near the Blackheath mines, we were received most kindly and hospitably. On our road from Richmond, we passed many fields which had been left fallow for years, after having been exhausted by a crop of tobacco. The whole country was covered with snow, and, in the pine forests, the tall trunks of the trees had a white coating on their windward side, as if one half had been painted. I persevered, nevertheless, in my examination of the mines, for my underground work was not impeded by the weather, and I saw so much that was new, and of high scientific interest in this coal-field, that I returned the following spring to complete my survey. There are two regions in the state of Virginia (a country about equal in area to the whole of England proper), in which productive coal-measures occur. In one of these which may be called the western coal-field, the strata belong to the ancient carboniferous group, characterized by fossil plants of the same genera, arid, to a great extent, the same species, as those found in the ancient coal-measures of Europe. The other one, wholly disconnected in its geographical and geological relations, is found to the east of the Appalachian Mountains, in the middle of that granitic region, sometimes called the Atlantic Slope. * In con sequence of the isolated position of these eastern coal-beds, the lowest of which rest immediately on the fundamental granite, while the uppermost are not covered by any overlying fossiliferous formations, we have scarcely any means of determining their relative age, except by the characters of their included organic remains. The study of these, induced Professor W. B. Rogers, in his memoir, published in 1842,f to declare his opinion that * See geological map of the U. S. in my " Travels in North America," vol. i. and ii. p. 92. t Trans, of American Geologists, p. 298. 212 UPRIGHT FOSSIL TREES. [CHAP. XV. this coal was of newer date than that of the Appalachians, and was about the age of the Oolite or Lias, a conclusion which, after a careful examination of the evidence on the spot, and of all the organic remains which 1 could collect, appears to me to come very near the truth. If we embrace this conclusion, these rocks are the only ones hitherto known in all Canada and the United States, which we can prove, by their organic remains, to be of contemporaneous origin with the Oolitic or Jurassic formation of Europe. The tract of country occupied by the crystalline rocks, granite, gneiss, hornblende-schist, and others, which runs parallel to the Alleghariy Mountains, and between them and the sea, is in this part of Virginia about seventy miles broad. In the midst of this area occurs the coal-field alluded to, twenty-six miles long, and varying in breadth from four to twelve miles. The James river flows through the middle of it, about fifteen miles from its northern extremity, while the Appomattox river traverses it near its southern borders. The beds lie in a trough (see section, fig. 4, p. 213), the lowest of them usually highly inclined where they crop out along the margin of the basin, while the strata higher in the series, occupying the central parts of the area, and which are devoid of organic remains and of coal, are nearly horizontal. A great portion of these coal-measures consists of quartzose sandstone and coarse grit, entirely composed of the detritus of the neighboring granitic and syenitic rocks. Dark carbonaceous shales arid clays, occasionally charged with iron ores, abound in the proximity of the coal-seams, and numerous impressions of plants, chiefly ferns and Zarnites, are met with in shales, to gether with flattened and prostrate stems of Calamites and Equi- setum. These last, however, the Calamites and Equisetum, are very commonly met with in a vertical position, more or less com pressed perpendicularly. I entertain no doubt that the greater number of these plants standing erect in the beds above and between the seams of coal which I saw at points many miles distant from each other, have grown in the places where they are now buried in sand and mud, and this fact implies the gradual accumulation of the coal-measures during a slow and repeated subsidence of the whole region. CHAP. XV.] THICKNESS OF COAL-SEAMS. 213 A great number of fossil fish, chiefly referable to two nearly allied species of a genus very distinct from any ichthyolite hith erto discovered elsewhere (a ganoid with a homocercal tail), occur in the lower strata, with a few shells ; but they afforded me no positive characters to determine whether the deposit was of marine or fresh-water origin. Above these fossiliferous beds, which probably never exceed 400 or 500 feet in thickness, a great succession of grits, sandstone, and shales, of unknown depth, occur. They have yielded no coal, nor as yet any organic re mains. No speculator has been bold enough to sink a shaft through them, and it is believed that toward the central parts of the basin they might have to pass through 2000 or 2500 feet of sterile rocks before reaching the fundamental coal-seams. The next ideal section will show the manner in which I sup pose the coal-field to be placed in a hollow in the granitic rocks, the whole country having suffered by great denudation, and the surface having been planed off almost uniformly, and at the same time overspread by a deep covering of gravel with red and yellow Section showing the Geological Position of the James River, or East Virginian Coal-Field. Fig. 4. A. Granite, gneiss, &c. B. Coal-measures. C. Tertiary strata. D. Drift or ancient alluvium. clay, concealing the subjacent formation from view, so that the structure of the region could not be made out without difficulty but for artificial excavations. It will be seen by the section that the tertiary strata first make their appearance at Rich mond about thirteen miles from the eastern outcrop of the coal, and they continue to occupy the lower country between that city and the Atlantic. The only beds of coal hitherto discovered lie in the lower part 214 VEGETABLE STRUCTURE OF COAL. [CHAP. XV. of the coal-measures, and consequently come up to the surface all round the margin of the basin. As the dip is usually at a con siderable angle, vertical shafts, from 400 to 800 feet deep, are required to reach the great seam, at the distance of a few hun dred yards inside the edge of the basin. It is only, therefore, along a narrow band of country that the coal can crop out naturally, and even here it is rarely exposed, and only where a river or valley has cut through the superficial drift, often thirty or forty feet thick. The principal coal-seam occurs in greatest force at Blackheath and the adjoining parts of Chesterfield county, where the coal is for the most part very pure, and actually attains the unusual thickness of between thirty or forty feet. I was not a little surprised, when I descended, with Mr. Gifford, a shaft 800 feet deep, to find myself in a chamber more than forty feet high, caused by the removal of the coal. Timber props of great strength are required to support the roof, and although the use of wood is lavish here, as in most parts of the United States, the strong props are seen to bend under the incumbent weight. This great seam is sometimes parted from the fundamental granite by an inch or two of shale, which seems to have constituted the soil on which the plants grew. At some points where the granite floor touches the coal, the contact may have been occasioned by subsequent disturbances, for the rocks are fractured and shifted in many places. This more modern coal, as well as that of New castle, and other kinds of more ancient date, exhibits under the microscope distinct evidence of vegetable structure, consisting in this case principally of parallel fibers or tubes, whose walls are pierced with circular or elongated holes. See fig. 5. B. and F. By analysis it is found that so far as relates to the proportions of carbon and hydrogen, the composition of this coal is identical with that of ordinary specimens of the most ancient coal of America and Europe, although the latter has been derived from an assemblage of plants of very distinct species. The bituminous coal, for example, of the Ohio coal-field, and that of Alabama, yields the same elements. For many years the cities of New York and Philadelphia hava been supplied with gas for lighting their streets and houses, from CHAP. XV.] EXPLOSION OF GAS. 215 Vegetable Structure of Mineral Charcoal from Clover-hill Mines, Virginia. coal of the Blackheath mines, and the annual quantity taken by Philadelphia alone, has of late years amounted to 10,000 tons. We miufht have expected, therefore, that there would be danger of the disengagement of inflammable gases from coal containing so much volatile matter. Accordingly, here, as in the English coal-pits, fatal explosions have sometimes occurred. One of these happened at Blackheath, in 1839, by which forty-five negroes and two white overseers lost their lives ; and another almost as serious, so lately as the year 1844. Before I examined this region, I was told that a strange anomaly occurred in it, for there were beds of coke overlying others consisting of bituminous coal. I found, on visiting the various localities of this natural coke, that it was caused by the vicinity or contact of volcanic rocks (greenstone and basalt), which, coming up through the granite, intersect the coal- measures, or sometimes make their way laterally between two strata, appearing as a conformable mass. As in the Durham coal-field in England (in the Has well collieries, for example), the igneous rock has driven out all the gaseous matter, and, where 216 MODERN AND ANCIENT COAL-FIELDS. [CHAP. XV. it overlies it, has deprived the upper coal of its volatile ingre dients, while its influence has not always extended to lower seams. In some spots, the conversion of coal into coke seems to have been brought about, not so much by the heating agency of the intrusive basalt, as by its mechanical effect in breaking up and destroying the integrity of the beds, and rendering them permeable to water, thereby facilitating the escape of the gases of decomposing coal. In conclusion, I may observe that I was much struck with the general similarity of this more modern or Oolitic coal-field, and those of ancient or Paleozoic date in England and in Europe generally. I was especially reminded of the carboniferous rocks near St. Etienne, in France, which I visited in 1843, These also rest on granite, and consist of coarse grits and sandstone derived from the detritus of granite. In both coal-fields, the French and the Virginian, upright Calamites abound ; fossil plants are met with in both, almost to the exclusion of other organic remains, shells especially being absent. The character of the coal is similar, but in the richness and thickness of the seams the Virginian formation is pre-eminent. When we behold phenomena so identical, repeated at times so remote in the earth's history, and at periods when such very distinct forms of vegeta tion flourished, we may derive from the fact a useful caution, in regard to certain popular generalizations respecting a peculiar state of the globe during the remoter of the two epochs alluded to. Some geologists, for example, have supposed an atmosphere densely charged with carbonic acid to be necessary to explain the origin of coal — an atmosphere so unlike the present, as to be unfit for the existence of air-breathing, vertebrate animals ; but this theory they will hardly be prepared to extend to so modern an era as the Oolitic or Triassic.^ During my visit to one of the coal-pits, an English overseer, who was superintending the works, told me that within his memory there had been a great improvement in the treatment * See a paper on this coal-field, by the author, Quarterly Journal Geolog. Soc., August, 1847, vol. iii. p. 261, and an accompanying memoir, descrip tive of the fossil plants, by Charles J. F. Bunbury, For. S. G. S. CHAP. XV.] NEGROES IN THE MINES. 217 of the negroes. Some years ago, a planter came to him with a refractory slave, and asked him to keep him underground for a year by way of punishment, saying, that no pay would be re quired for his hire. The overseer retorted that he would be no man's jailer. The British company at Blackheath having re solved not to employ any slaves, and Mr. Gifford, having engaged 130 free^^roes, found he could preserve good discipline without corpora^^Pnishment ; and he not only persuaded several newly arrived laborers from England to work with the blacks, but old Virginians, also, of the white race, engaged themselves, although their countrymen looked down upon them at first for associating with such companions. They confessed that, for a time, " they felt very awkward," but it was not long before the proprietors of other mines followed the example which had been set them. VOL. i. — K CHAPTER XVI. Journey through North Carolina. — Wilmington. — Recent Firj^i Passports for Slaves. — Cape Fear River and Smithfield. — Spanish IJHB^and Uses of. — Charleston. — Anti-Negro Feeling. — Passage from Mulattoes to Whites. — Law against importing free Blacks. — Dispute with Massachu setts. — Society in Charleston. — Governesses. — War Panic. — Anti-English Feeling caused by Newspaper Press. — National Arbitration of the Amer icans. — Dr. Bachman's Zoology. — Geographical Representation of Spe cies. — Rattle-Snakes. — Turkey Buzzards. Dec. 23, 1845. — THE monotony of the scenery in the princi pal route from the northern to the southern states is easily understood by a geologist, for the line of railroad happens to run for hundreds of miles on the tertiary strata, near their junction with the granitic rocks. Take any road in a transverse direction from the sea coast to the Alleghanies, and the traveler will meet with the greatest variety in the scenery.^ In passing over the tertiary sands and clays, we see Pine Barrens where the soil is sandy, and a swamp, or cane-brake, where the argillaceous beds come to the surface. The entire absence of all boulders and stones, such as are observable almost every where in the New England States and New York, is a marked geological peculiar ity of these southern lowlands. Such erratic blocks and boulders are by no means confined in the north to the granitic or second ary formations, for some of the largest of them, huge fragments of granite, for example, twenty feet in diameter, rest on the newer tertiary deposits of the island of Martha's Vineyard, off the coast of Massachusetts. After leaving Richmond, I remarked that the railway from Weldon to Wilmington, through North Carolina, had not im proved in the last three years, nor the stations or inns where wo stopped. I was told, in explanation, that this line would soon * Sco iny " Travels in North America," voL i. p. 93 ; anjjj._» c Section of Channel, Bank, Levees (a and b), and Swamps of Mississippi River. Thus a b c may represent the cavity in which the river flows, the artificial levees at the top of the banks being seen at a and b. The banks are higher than the bottom of the swamps, f g and d e ; because, when the river overflows, the coarser part of the sediment is deposited at a and b, where the speed of the current is first checked. It usually runs there with a gentle current among herbage, reeds, and shrubs ; and is nearly filtered of its earthy ingredients before it arrives at the swamps. It is probable that the Mississippi flows to the nearest point of the Gulf, where there is a sufficient depth or capacity in the bed of the sea to CHAP. XXX.] SNAG-BOATS. 133 receive its vast burden of water and mud ; and if it went to Lake Pontchartrain, it would have to excavate a new valley like a b c, many times deeper than the bottom of that lagoon. The levee raised to protect the low grounds from inundation, was at first, when we left New Orleans, only four feet high, so as not to impede our view of the country from the deck ; but as we ascended, both the natural bank and the levee became higher and higher, and by the time we had sailed up sixty-five miles, I could only just see the tops of tall trees in the swamps. Even these were only discernible from the roof of the cabin, or what is called the hurricane deck, when we had gone 100 miles from New Orleans. The large waves raised by the rapid movement of several hun dred steamers, causes the undermining and waste of the banks to proceed at a more rapid rate than formerly. The roots also of trees growing at the edge of the stream, were very effective formerly in holding the soil together, before so much timber had been cleared away. Now the banks offer less resistance to the wasting action of the stream. The quantity of drift wood floated down the current has not diminished sensibly within the last twenty years, but nearly all of it is now intercepted in the last forty miles above New Orleans, and split up into logs by the proprietors to supply the furnaces of steamboats, which are thus freeing the river of the heavy masses against which they used formerly to bump in the night, or round which they were forced to steer in the day. There has also been a marked decrease, of late years, in the number of snags. The trunks of uprooted trees, so called, get fixed in the mud, having sunk with their heavier end to the bottom, and remain slanting down the stream, so as to pierce through the bows of vessels sail ing up. A government report just published, shows that two snag-boats, each having a crew of twenty men, one of them draw ing four feet, and the other two feet water, have, extracted 700 snags in four weeks out of the Missouri, and others have been at work on the Mississippi. When it is remembered that some of the most dangerous of these snags have been known to continue planted for twenty years in the same spot (so slowly does wood 134 STEAMBOAT ACCIDENTS. [CHAP. XXX. decay under water), it may readily be conceived how much this formidable source of danger has lessened in the last few years. At the season when the river is lowest, grappling irons are firm ly fixed to these snags, and the whole force of the engines in the snag-boat is exerted to draw them out of the mud ; they are then cut into several pieces, and left to float down the stream, but part of them being water-logged, sink at once to the bottom. Several travelers assure me, that serious accidents are not more common now on the Mississippi and its tributaries, when there are 800 steamers afloat, than twenty years ago, when the number of steamers was less than fifty. The increased security arises, chiefly, from the greater skill and sobriety of the captains and engineers, who rarely run races as formerly, and who usually cast anchor during fogs and in dark nights. Such precautions have no doubt, become more and more imperative, in proportion as the steamers have multiplied. On the wide Atlantic, the chances of collision in a fog may be slight, but to sail in so narrow a channel as that of a river, at the rate of ten miles an hour, unable to see a ship's length ahead, with the risk of meeting, every moment, other steamers coming down at the rate of fifteen miles an hour, implies such recklessness, that one can not wonder that navigators on the western waters have earned the character of setting small value on their own and others' lives. Formerly, the most fre quent cause of explosions was a deficiency of water in the boiler ; one of the great improvements adopted, within the last five years, for preventing this mischief, is the addition of a separate steam- apparatus for pumping up water, and securing a regular supply by machinery, instead of trusting to the constant watchfulness of the engineers. On the whole, it seems to be more dangerous to, travel by land, in a new country, than by river steamers, and some who have survived repeated journeyings in stage-coaches, show us many scars. The judge who escorted my wife to Natchez, informed her that he had been upset no less than thir teen times. On the left bank, about sixty miles above New Orleans, stands Jefferson College ; a schoolmaster from the north, speaking to me of its history, imputed its want of success to the insubordination CHAP. XXX.] THUNDER-SHOWER. 135 of the youths, the inability of southern planters to govern their children themselves, and their unwillingness to delegate the necessary authority to the masters of universities or schools. " But they are growing wiser," he said, " and vigorous efforts are making to improve the discipline in the university of Char- lottesville, in Virginia, which has hitherto been too lax. We soon afterward passed a convent on the same bank, and I heard praise bestowed on the " Sisters of Charity," for their management of a hospital. At St. Thomas's Point, about twenty-five miles above New Orleans, we passed a fine plantation, which formerly belonged to Mr. Preston, of South Carolina, a distinguished member of Con gress, whose acquantaince I made in 1842. There are, I am told, nearly 1000 negroes here, and I am astonished at the large proportion of the colored race settled every where on the land bordering the river. The relative value of colored and white labor was here, as elsewhere, a favorite theme of conversation, when there happened to be passengers on board from the northern states. The task of three negroes, they say, in Louisiana, is to cut and bind up two cords of wood in a day, whereas, a single white man, in the State of New York, prepares three cords daily. In packing cotton, the negroes are expected to perform a third less work than a white laborer. In the afternoon we were overtaken by a heavy thunder-shower, the water pouring off the eaves of our cabin roof, in copious streams, into the river, through numerous spouts or tin pipes. When the rain abated, I saw a fog slowly stealing over parts of the stream, for the water was much colder than the air. For some hours we were unable to proceed, and the captain informed me, that wre should remain prisoners until the temperature of the Mississippi and that of the atmosphere were more nearly equalized. This, he hoped, would happen in one of two ways, either by a renewal of rain, which would warm the river, or by the wind veering round from south to west, which wrould cool the air. The latter change soon occurred, and we were instantly released. I was congratulated by some northerners at having escaped the musquitocs. The captain said, "that they who are acclirnat- 136 MUSQUITOES.— BAYOUS. [CHAP. XXX. ized, suffer no longer from the bites, or scarcely at all, and even the young children of Creoles are proof against them, although the face and neck of a new settler, whether young or old, swell up frightfully. Yet the wild cattle and deer have not acquired any hereditary immunity from this torment, and, to escape it, are seen standing in the lakes with their heads only above the water." Some passengers assured me, " that when people have recovered from the yellow fever, the skin, although in other respects as sensitive as ever, is no longer affected by a musquito bite, or, if at all, in a very slight degree;" and they added, "that last year, 1845, both the yellow fever and the musquitoes were in abeyance, although the heat of the season was intense." After we had sailed up the river eighty miles, I was amused by the sight of the insignificant village of Donaldsonville, the future glories of which I had heard so eloquently depicted.^ Its position, however, is doubtless important ; for here the right bank is intersected by that arm of the Mississippi, called Bayou La Fourche. This arm has much the appearance of a canal, and by it, I am told, our steamer, although it draws no less than ten feet water, might sail into the Gulf of Mexico, or traverse a large part of that wonderful inland navigation in the delta which con tributes so largely to the wealth of Louisiana. A curious description was given me, by one of my fellow travelers, of that same low country, especially the region called Attakapas. It contains, he said, wide " quaking prairies," where cattle are pastured, and where you may fancy yourself far inland. Yet, if you pierce any where through the turf to the depth of two feet, you find sea-fish swimming about, which make their way in search of food under the superficial sward, from the Gulf of Mexico, through subterranean watery channels. Notwithstanding the quantity of sediment in the Mississippi, they tell me that its waters are inhabited by abundance of shad and herring, and in several places, when I asked the fishermen what they were catching, they answered, " Sardines." In the course of the first day we saw the Bayou Plaquemine on the right, and the Iberville River on the left bank of the Mis- * Ante, p. 99. CHAP. XXX.] BURIED TREES, PORT HUDSON. 137 sissippi, the two arms next above that of La Fourche. One of those natural rafts of floating trees which occasionally bridge over the western rivers for many years in succession, becoming covered over with soil, shrubs, and trees, blocked up till lately the Bayou Plaquemine. The obstacle was at length removed at the expense of the state, and the rush of water through the newly cleared channel was so tremendous, that several engineers entertained apprehensions, lest the whole of the Mississippi should take its course by this channel to the sea, deserting New Orleans. Mr. Forshey assured me there was no real ground for such fears, because the Mississippi, as before hinted,^ takes at present the shortest cut to that part of the Gulf where it can find a basin deep and capacious enough to receive it. During the night we passed Baton Rouge, the first point above New Orleans where any land higher and older than the alluvial plain comes up to the bank to constitute what is termed a bluff. The cliff there is only a few feet high. The next bluff is at Port Hudson, 2 5 miles higher up the river, and 165 miles above New Orleans. I had been urged by Dr. Carpenter to examine the geology of this bluff, which I had also wished to do, because Bartram, in his travels, in 1777, discovered there the existence of a fossil forest at the base of the tall cliff, and had commented with his usual sagacity on the magnitude of the geographical changes implied by its structure. The following are his words, which deserve the more attention, because the particular portion of the cliff described by him, has long ago been undermined and swept away by the Mississippi. " Next morning," says Bartram, " we set off again on our return home, and called by the way at the cliffs, which is a perpendicular bank or bluff, rising up out of the river near one hundred feet above the present surface of the water, whose active current sweeps along by it. From eight or nine feet below the loamy vegetative mold at top, to within four or five feet of the water, these cliffs present to view strata of clay, marl, and chalk of all colors, as brown, red, yellow, white, blue, and purple ; there are separate strata of these various colors, as well as mixed or parti-colored : the lowest stratum next the water * Ante, p. 132. 138 BURIED TREES. [CHAP. XXX. is exactly of the same black mud, or rich soil, as the adjacent low cypress swamps above and below the bluff; and here, in the cliffs, we see vast stumps of cypress and other trees which, at this day, grow in these low, wet swamps, and which range on a level with them. These stumps are sound, stand upright, and seem to be rotted off about two or three feet above the spread of their roots ; their trunks, limbs, &c., lie in all directions about them. But when these swampy forests were growing, and by what cause they were cut off and overwhelmed by the various strata of earth, which now rise near one hundred feet above, at the brink of the cliffs, and two or three times that height, but a few hundred yards back, are inquiries perhaps not easily answered. The swelling heights, rising gradually over and beyond this precipice, are now adorned with high forests of stately Magnolia, Liquidambar, Fagus, Quercus, Lauras, Morus, Juglans, Tilia, Halesia, JEsculus, Callicarpa, Liriodendron" fyc.* Dr. Carpenter, in 1838, or sixty-one years after Bartram, made a careful investigation of this same bluf£ having ascertained that in the interval the river had been continually wrearing it away at such a rate as to expose to view a section several hun dred feet to the eastward of that seen by his predecessor. I shall first give a brief abstract of Dr. Carpenter's observations, published in Sillirnan's Journal.! " About the level of low water, at the bottom of the bluff, a bed of vegetable matter is exposed, consisting of sticks, leaves, and fruits, arranged in thin horizontal laminae, with very thin layers of clay interposed. Among the fruits were observed the nuts of the swamp hickory (Juglam aquoMca) very abundant, the burr- like pericarp of the sweet gurn (Liquidambar styraciflua), and walnuts, the fruit of Juglans nigra. The logs lying horizontally are those of cypress (Cupressus thyoides), swamp hickory, a species of cotton wood (Populus), and other trees peculiar to the low swamps of Louisiana. Besides these there were a great number of erect stumps of the large deciduous cypress ( Taxodium disticlium} sending their roots deep into the clay beneath. This * Bartram, " Travels in North America," p. 433. t Vol. xxxvi. p. 118. CHAP. XXX.] BLUFFS OF PORT HUDSON. 139 buried forest is covered by a bed of clay, twelve feet thick, and is followed by another superimposed bed of vegetable matter, four feet thick, containing logs arid branches, half turned into lignite, and erect stumps, among which there are none of the large cy presses, as in the lower bed. Among the logs, the water-oak (Quercus aquatica) was recognizable, and a pine with a great deal of bark, and the strobiles of the Pinus tceda. " This upper forest points to the former existence, on the spot, of one of those swamps, occurring at higher levels, in which the Ciqiressus disticha ( Taxodium) does not grow. Above the upper layer of erect stumps are various beds of clay, in all more than fifty feet thick, with two thin layers of vegetable matter intercalated ; and above the whole more than twenty feet of sand, the lower part of which included siliceous pebbles derived from some ancient rocks, and containing the marks of encrinites and corals (Favosites)," &c. Dr. Carpenter, when he published this account in 1838, thought he had detected the distinct marks of the ax* on some of the logs accompanying the buried stumps ; but he informed me, in 1846, that he was mistaken, and that the apparent notches were caused by the gaping open of the bituminized wood, probably after shrinking and drying, of the truth of which I was myself convinced, after seeing the specimens. That the lowest bed had originally been a real cypress swamp, was proved beyond all doubt by the stumps being surrounded by those peculiar knobs or excrescences called cypress knees, which this tree throws out from its base, when it grows in a submerged soil. These knees sometimes rise up through the water from a depth of six or eight feet, and are supposed to supply the roots with air, as they are never formed when the cypress grows on dry ground. At the time of my visit, the river was unfortunately too high to enable me to see the lowest deposit containing the memorials of this ancient forest, the geological interest of which is much enhanced by its having been seen by Bartram, and again by Carpenter, extending horizontally over a considerable area. I learnt from several residents at Port Hudson, and from Captain * Silliman. ibid. p. 119, 140 BURIED TREES. [CHAP. XXX Sellick. who commanded the Rainbow, that, last season, when, the water was low, the stumps of the buried trees were as con spicuous as ever at the base of the cliff, which has been much undermined by the river since the year 1838, when Dr. Carpenter explored it. The fossil forest was 12 feet under water when I landed, but at higher levels I saw the trunks of two trees buried in a vertical position at different levels, each of them about 2£ feet high. I estimated the height of the entire cliff to be about 75 feet, consisting in part of stiff unctuous clay, and partly of loam, but with no chalk, as stated by Bartram. A small streamlet, artificially led to the top of the bluff, had, within the last four years, cut out a ravine no less than sixty feet deep through the upper loamy beds. In the sections thus laid open, I saw precisely such deposits as a river would form in its bed, or in the swamps which it had occasionally flooded. Near the bottom was a layer of leaves, resembling those of the bay, with numerous roots of trees and wood in a fresher state than I ever saw them in any tertiary formation. Taking a canoe, I after ward proceeded to examine that part of the cliff which extends about a mile down the river's left bank, immediately below Port Hudson, where it is between seventy and eighty feet high. The deposits laid open to view were divisible into three groups, the topmost consisting of brown clay, the middle of whitish siliceous sand, and the lower of green clay. I found some men digging the middle or sandy stratum for making bricks, and they had just come upon a prostrate buried tree, black and carbonized, but not turned into lignite. I counted in it 220 rings of annual growth. Near it I found two other smaller fossil trunks, all lying as if they had been drift wood carried down by a river and buried in sand. One of the men pointed out to me that the structure of the wood showed distinctly that they belonged to three different species, one being oak, another hickory, and the third sassafras. Their texture seemed certainly that of distinct genera of trees, but for the accuracy of my informant's determination I can not vouch. At this point they told me the bluff has, in the course of the last eight years, lost ground no less than 200 feet by the encroachment of the river. CHAP. XXX.] LANDSLIP. 141 To prove that the present site of the buried forest before alluded to, must be far from the point where Bartram or even Carpenter saw it, an account was given me by the residents here, of several recent landslips near Port Hudson ; one in particular, a few years ago, when by the caving in of the bank, three acres of ground, fifty or sixty feet high, composed of clay and sand, and covered by a forest, sank down bodily in the river, and were then gradually washed away. One of the eye-witnesses related to me that the trees were at first seen to tremble, then large rents began to open in the soil deeper and deeper, after which the movement was such that the boughs of the trees lashed each other, and acorns and beech nuts were showered down like hail. A herd of pigs was so intent in devouring these, that they allowed themselves to be carried down vertically fifty feet, the subsidence occupying about five minutes. The outer edge of the bluff, with some of the swine, fell into the river, but these swam to the sunk part of the bluff, and joined their companions. The owners watched them anxiously till dusk, unable to go to their rescue ; but at length, to their surprise, they saw a leader, followed by all the rest, wind his way along narrow ledges on the face of the precipice, from which the fallen mass had been detached, and climb up to the top. Next morning, to their no less astonishment, they found the herd feeding again on the same perilous ground, and saw them again return by the same path at night. I have dwelt at some length on the geological phenomena disclosed in the interesting sections of these bluffs, because I agree with Bartram and Carpenter, that they display a series of deposits similar to the modern formations of the alluvial plain and delta of the Mississippi. They lead us, therefore, to the important conclusion, that there have been changes in the relative level of land and sea since the establishment, in this part of the continent, of a geographical state of things approximating to that now pre vailing. Then, as now, there were swamps in which the decid uous cypress and other trees grew, and became buried in mud, without any intermixture of sand or pebbles. At that remote period, also, drift wood was brought down from the upper country, and inclosed in sandy strata. Although I could not ascertain 142 ANCIENT SUBSIDENCE OF DELTA. [CHAP. XXX. the exact height above the level of the sea, of the fossil cypress swamp at Port Hudson, I presume it is less than thirty feet ; and in order to explain the superposition of 150 feet of fresh-water sediment, we must imagine the gradual subsidence of fluviatile strata to a depth far below the level of the sea, followed by an upward movement to as great an amount. The depression must have taken place so slowly as to allow the river to raise the surface by sedimentary deposition continually, and never permit the sea to encroach and cover the area. Jt is quite conceivable, for example, that the present delta and alluvial plain should sink 150 feet without the salt water coming up even to New Orleans, provided the land went down only a few feet or inches in a cen tury, and provided the ground was raised vertically to the same amount by fluviatiie mud, sand, or vegetable matter. But if the land should go down even ten or twelve feet at once, the whole delta would be submerged beneath the sea. Were the downward movement here supposed to be followed by an upheaval to the extent of about 150 feet, and should the river then cut a channel through the upraised mass, we might expect to see the modern formation exhibit appearances similar to those of high antiquity above described at Port Hudson. I shall endeavor, in the sequel, to show that oscillations of level, like those here assumed to account for the phenomena at Port Hudson, will explain other appearances, observable, not only in cliffs bounding the valley of the Mississippi, but in ancient alluvial terraces bordering the Ohio, and other tributaries of the great river. CHAPTER XXXI. Fontania near Port Hudson. — Lake Solitude. — Floating Island. — Bony Pike, — Story of the Devil's Swamp. — Embarking by Night in Steamboat. — Literary Clerk. — Old Levees undermined. — Succession of upright buried Trees in Bank. — Raccourci Cut-off. — Bar at Mouth of Red River. — Shelly Fresh-water Loam of Natchez. — Recent Ravines in Table-Land. — Bones of extinct Quadrupeds. — Human Fossil Bone. — Question of supposed co existence of Man with extinct Mammalia discussed. — Tornado at Natchez. — Society, Country-Houses, and Gardens. — Landslips. — Indian Antiqui ties. AFTER I had examined the bluff below Port Hudson, I went down the river in my boat to Fontania, a few miles to the south, to pay a visit to Mr. Faulkner, a proprietor to whom Dr. Car penter had given me a letter of introduction. He received me with great politeness, and, at my request, accompanied me at once to see a crescent-shaped sheet of water on his estate, called Lake Solitude, evidently an ancient bed of the Mississippi, now deserted. It is one of the few examples of old channels which occur to the east of the great river, the general tendency of which is always to move from west to east. Of this eastward movement there is a striking monument on the other side of the Mississippi immediately opposite Port Hudson, called Fausse Riviere, a sheet of water of the usual horse-shoe form. One of my fellow pas sengers in the Rainbow had urged me to visit Lake Solitude, " because," said he, " there is a floating island in it, well wooded, on which a friend of mine once landed from a canoe, when, to his surprise, it began to sink with his weight. In great alarm he climbed a cypress tree, which also began immediately to go down with him as fast as he ascended. He mounted higher and higher into its boughs, until at length it ceased to subside, and, looking round, he saw in every direction, for a distance of fifty yards, the whole wood in motion." I wished much to know what founda tion there could be for so marvelous a tale. It appears that 144 BONY PIKE. [CHAP. XXXI. there is always a bayou or channel, connecting, during floods, each deserted bend or lake with the main river, through which large floating logs may pass. These often form rafts, and become covered with soil supporting shrubs and trees. At first such green islands are blown from one part of the lake to another by the winds, but the deciduous cypress, if it springs up in such a soil, sends down strong roots, many feet or yards long, so as to cast anchor in the muddy bottom, rendering the island stationary. Lake Solitude, situated in lat. 31° N. is two miles and a half in circuit, and is most appropriately named, being a retired sheet of water, its borders overhung by the swamp willow, now just coming into leaf, and skirted by the tall cypress, from which long streamers of Spanish moss are hanging. On the east it is bounded by high ground, a prolongation of the bluff at Port Hudson, on which the hickory, the oak, and many splendid magnolias, with the beech, walnut, tulip tree, and holly, and a variety of beautiful shrubs are seen. The surface of the lake (except near the shore, where it is covered with the water lily) faithfully reflects the trees and sky, presenting, in this respect, a marked contrast to the yellow waters of the Mississippi. It is inhabited by hundreds of alligators and countless fish, and so many birds were swimming on it, or flying over it, that it seemed as if all the wild creatures which the steamers had scared away from the main river had taken refuge here. Several alligators were lying motionless, with their noses just above the surface of the water, resembling black logs. About fourteen years ago, some of them were not unfre- quently seen here measuring fifteen feet in length, but they now rarely exceed eight feet. I observed a large gar-fish, or bony pike, called the alligator gar (Lepidosteus), leap nearly out of the water in pursuit of its prey. Its hard shining scales are so strong and difficult to pierce, that it can scarcely be shot. It can live longer out of water than any other fish of this country, having a large cellular swimming bladder, which is said almost to serve the purpose of a real lung. One of them has been known to seize the nostrils of a mule who was drinking, and only to be shaken off on dry ground, when its whole body had been dragged into the air. CAP. XXXL] THE DEVIL'S SWAMP. 145 On the "boughs of the willows were perched several white cranes, while herons, cormorants, and water-rails were swimming on the lake, their various notes adding to the wildness of the scene. Shriller than all, as the evening came on, we heard the voice of the large bull-frog. As we went back to the house, over the high ground, we saw three kinds of squirrels and many birds. So skillful was my companion with his rifle, that he brought down every bird which came within shot — owls, rice-birds, woodpeckers, and jays — that I might examine their plumage. I admired a beautiful cluster of the flowers and fruit of the red maple, about twenty feet above our heads. He offered to pick them for me, and, without delay, took aim so dexterously, as to sever the stem from the bough just below the blossom, without seeming to have injured the flower by a single shot. In the course of our walk, I observed several shrubs, almost hidden by the luxuriant growth of that most ele gant of climbers, the yellow jessamine (Gelsemmm nitidum), with its fragrant blossoms. From these heights south of Port Hudson, we had a grand view of the great plain of the Mississippi, far to the south and west, an endless labyrinth of uninhabited swamps, covered with a variety of timber, and threaded with bayous, one resembling another so exactly, that many a stranger, who has entered them in a canoe, has wandered for days without being able to extricate himself from their woody mazes. Among these morasses, one called the Devil's Swamp was in sight, and I found a curious account of the origin of its name in a MS. dated 1776, of Caleb Carpenter, a relation of my New Orleans friend. A German emigrant having settled near the bank of the Mis sissippi, in 1776, felled, with great labor, some lofty cypresses; but, happening one day to make a false turn in his canoe, entered, by mistake, a neighboring bayou. Every feature was so exactly like the scene where he had been toiling- for weeks, that he could riot question the identity of the spot. He saw all the same bends, both in the larger and smaller channels. He made out distinctly the same trees, among others the very individual cypresses which he had cut down. There they stood, erect and entire, without VOL. II. G 146 EMBARKATION BY NIGHT. [CHAP. XXXI. retaining one mark of his ax. He concluded that some evil spirit had, in a single night, undone all the labors of many weeks ; and, seized with superstitious terror, he fled from the enchanted wood, never to return. In order that I might not spend an indefinite time on the Mississippi, I determined to be prepared for a start in the first chance steamer which might be bound for Natchez, 140 miles distant, whenever an opportunity should offer, whether by day or night. I was told by my host that a trusty black servant had been already appointed to look out for a steamer, which was to convey some farm produce to a proprietor far off on the Pvecl River. He proposed, therefore, to give orders to this negro to wake me if any boat bound for Natchez should appear in sight before morning. Accordingly, about an hour after midnight, I was roused from rny slumbers, and went down over a sloping lawn to the steam-boat landing on the river's bank. The sky was clear, and it was bright moonlight, and the distant cries of the owls, and other night birds around Lake Solitude, \vere distinctly heard, mingled with the chirping of myriads of frogs. On the low bank my watchman had lighted a signal fire, and I heard the puffing of a steamer in the distance ascending the stream. She soon neared us, and, on being hailed, answered, " La Belle Creole, bound for Bayou Sara." This port was far short of my destina tion, and when we shouted " Natchez," the captain first asked if we had any wood to sell, and on learning there was none, sailed away. I returned to the house, and took another nap of several hours, when I received a second summons from my faith ful sentinel. The scene was entirely changed ; it was nearly day-break, and the fogs rising from the marshes had begun to cover the river. I was in despair, fearing that our signal fire would not be discerned through the mist. Soon, however, we heard the loud gasping of the two steam-pipes sounding nearer and nearer, and a large steamer coming suddenly close to the landing, was announced as " the Talma of Cincinnati." In a few minutes I was crossing the narrow plank which led from the steep bank to the vessel, which was actually in motion as I walked over it, so that I was glad to find myself safe on deck. CHAP. XXXI.] LITERARY CLERK.— OLD LEVEES. 147 They told me I must register my name at the office. The clerk asked me if I was the author of a work on geology, and being answered in the affirmative, wished to know if I was acquainted with Mr. Macaulay. On my saying yes, he took out a late number of the Edinburgh Review, and begged me to tell him whether the article on Addison was written by my friend, for he had been discussing this matter with a passenger that evening. When I had confirmed this opinion he thanked me, expressing much regret that he should not see me again, since I was to land next day at Natchez before he should be up. This conversation lasted but a few minutes, and in as many more I was in a good berth under a musquito net, listening to a huge bell tolling in the fog, to warn every flat-boat to get out of the way, on peril of being sent instantly to the bottom. In spite of this din, and that of the steam funnels arid machinery, I soon fell asleep for the third time. When I carne on deck next day, all hands were at work, taking in wood at a landing below Bayou Sara, where I saw on the top of the river bank, now sixteen feet high, several striking memorials of the ravages of former inundations. Besides the newest levee, there was one which had given way previously to the great flood of 1814, and a still older one, which, although once parallel, was now cut off abruptly, and at right angles to the present course of the river. They reminded me of the remnant of an oval intrench- ment at the edge of the cliff near New Haven in Sussex, and of those paths leading directly to the brink of precipices overhanging the sea in many maritime counties in England. Farther on, at another wooding station, in Adams County, Mississippi, I observed a bank eighteen feet in perpendicular height, and said to be forty- five feet high when the water is at its lowest. It was composed of sand, or sandy loam, indicating a comparatively rapid deposi tion. In such loam, no erect stumps and trunks of trees are met with, the sediment having accumulated on the margin of the river in a few years too fast to allow large trees to grow there. But in other places, where the bank consisted of fine, stiff clay, I saw here and there the buried stools of cypresses, and other trees, in an upright position, with their roots attached, sometimes 148 UPRIGHT BURIED TREES. [CHAP. XXXI. repeated at several different levels iii the face of the same bank. I first remarked one of these at a point forty-five miles above New Orleans, and they increased in number as we ascended. When first told of this phenomenon, before visiting the Mississippi, it appeared to me very difficult of explanation. I soon, however, discovered that the great river, in its windings, often intersects the swamps or cypress basins which had been previously filled up with fine mud or vegetable matter, at various distances from the former river-channel. Suppose an ancient bed of the Mississippi, or some low part of the plain, to become fit for the growth of cypress, yet to be occasionally flooded, so that the soil is slowly raised by fine mud, drift wood, or vegetable matter like peat. As the cypress ( Taxo- diuin distichum} often attains to the age of three or four centu ries, and, according to many accounts, occasionally in Louisiana to that of two thousand years, it is clear that the bottoms of the oldest trees will often be enveloped in soil several feet deep, before they die, and rot down to the point where they have been covered up with mud. In the mean time other trees will have begun to grow on adjoining spots, at different and considerably higher levels, and eventually some of these will take root in soil deposited directly over the stump or decayed trunk of some of the first or oldest series of cypresses. They who have studied the delta affirm that such successive growths of trees are repeated through a perpendic ular height of twenty-five feet without any change occurring in the level of the land.*' Proceeding up the river, we soon passed Bayou Sara on our right hand, and came to the isthmus called the Raccourci cut off, across which a trench nine feet deep has been dug, in the hope that the Mississippi would sweep out a deep channel. This " cut-off/' should it ever become the main channel, would enable a steamer to reach, in one mile, a point, to gain which costs now a circuit of twenty-six miles, and two and a half hours. Unfortunately, when they cleared the forest in this spot, the soil of the new canal was found to consist of a stiff blue clay, * See Dickeson and Brown, Silliman's Journal, Second Series, vol. v. p. 17, Jan. 1848. CHAP. XXXI.] RACCOURCI CUT-OFF. 1 19 strengthened by innumerable roots of trees, and, in the flood of 1845, the surplus waters of the Mississippi poured through the cut with great velocity, yet failed to deepen it materially. By shortening the channel twenty-five miles, the fall of the river would be augmented, and the engineer flattered himself that the effect might extend as far up as the mouth of the Red River. By accelerating the current there it was hoped that a deeper passage might be kept open in the sand-bar, which now blocks up the navigation of that important tributary for the greater part of the year. Some experienced pilots assured me, that the supposed short ening of the channel of the Mississippi, between its junction with the Ohio and New Orleans, was, in a great degree, a delusion. Instead of the boasted gain of fifty miles, they say that not a third of this distance has been realized. Immediately after the completion of a new cut-off", the Mississippi begins to restore the natural curvature of its channel by eating away one bank and throwing out a sand-bar on the opposite side. Another fifty miles brought us to the mouth of the Red River, where I saw the formidable bar, before alluded to, covered, for the most part, by a growth of young willows and cotton-wood (Populus angulata). After leaving the mouth of Red River, we passed two bluffs on the left or eastern bank, one that of Fort Adams, a very picturesque line of precipices, the other called Ellis's Cliffs. In both I observed a predominance of white sand, similar to that seen in part of the bluff at Port Hudson. At Natchez (where I rejoined my wife), there is a fine range of bluffs, several miles long, and more than 200 feet in perpen dicular height, the base of which is washed by the river. The lower strata, laid open to view, consist of gravel and sand, desti tute of organic remains, except some wood and silicified corals, and other fossils, which have been derived from older rocks ; while the upper sixty feet are composed of yellow loam, present ing, as it wastes away, a vertical face toward the river. From the surface of this clayey precipice are seen, projecting in relief, the whitened and perfect shells of land-snails, of the genera Helix, lldiclna, Pupa, C//clostoma, Achatina, and Succinca. These 150 FRESH-WATER LOAM OF NATCHEZ. [CHAP. XXXI. shells, of which we collected twenty species, are all specifically identical with those now inhabiting the valley of the Mississippi. The resemblance of this loam to that fluviatile silt of the val ley of the Rhine, between Cologne and Basle, which is generally called " loess" and " lehm" in Alsace, is most perfect. In both countries the genera of shells are the same, and as, in the ancient alluvium of the Rhine, the loam sometimes passes into a lacus trine deposit containing shells of the genera Lymnea, Planorbis, and Cydas, so I found at Washington, about seven miles inland, or eastward from Natchez, a similar passage of the American loam into a deposit evidently formed in a pond or lake. It con sisted of marl containing shells of Lymnea, Planorbis, Paludiiia, PUysa, and Cyclas, specifically agreeing with testacea now inhabiting the United States. With the land-shells before men tioned are found, at different depths in the loam, the remains of the mastodon ; and in clay, immediately under the loam, and above the sand and gravel, entire skeletons have been met with of the megalonyx, associated with the bones of the horse, bear, stag, ox, and other quadrupeds, for the most part, if not all, of extinct species. This great loamy formation, with terrestrial and fresh-water shells, extends horizontally for about twelve miles inland, or eastward from the river, forming a platform about 200 feet high above the great plain of the Mississippi. In consequence, however, of the incoherent arid destructible nature of the sandy clay, every streamlet flowing over what must originally have been a level table-land, has cut out for itself, in its way to the Mississippi, a deep gully or ravine. This excavating process has, of late years, proceeded with accelerated speed, especially in the course of the last thirty or thirty-five years. Some attribute the increased erosive action to partial clearings of the native forest, a cause of which the power has been remarkably displayed, as before stated, within the last twenty years, in Georgia.* Others refer the change mainly to the effects of the great earthquake of New Madrid, in 1811—12, by which this region was much fissured, ponds being dried up and many landslips caused. * See tonte, p. 29. CHAP. XXX I.] FOSSIL HUMAN BONE. 151 In company with Dr. Dickeson and Colonel Wales, I visited a narrow valley, hollowed out through the shelly loam recently named " the Mammoth ravine," from the fossils found there. Colonel Wiley, a proprietor of that part of the State of Mississippi, who knew the country well before the year 1812, assured me that this ravine, although now seven miles long, and in some parts sixty feet deep, with its numerous ramifications, has been entirely formed since the earthquake. He himself had plowed some of the land exactly over one spot which the gully now traverses. A considerable sensation was recently caused in the public mind, both in America and Europe, by the announcement of the discovery of a fossil human bone, so associated with the remains of extinct quadrupeds, in " the Mammoth ravine," as to prove that man must have co-existed with the rnegalonyx and its con temporaries. Dr. Dickeson showed me the bone in question, admitted by all anatomists to be part of a human pelvis, and being a fragment of the os innominatmn. He felt persuaded that it had been taken out of the clay underlying the loam, in the ravine above alluded to, about six miles from Natchez. I examined the perpendicular cliffs, which bound a part of this water-course, where the loam, unsolidified as it is, retains its verticality, and found land-shells in great numbers at the depth of about thirty feet from the top. I was informed that the fossil remains of the mammoth (a name commonly applied in the Unit ed States to the mastodon) had been obtained, together with the bones of some other extinct mammalia, from below these shells in the undermined cliff. I could not ascertain, however, that the human pelvis had been actually dug out in the presence of a geologist, or any practiced observer, and its position unequivo cally ascertained. Like most of the other fossils, it was, I believe, picked up in the bed of the stream, which would simply imply that it had been washed out of the cliffs. But the evi dence of the antiquity of the bone depends entirely on the part of the precipice from which it was derived. It was stained black, as if buried in a peaty or vegetable soil, and may have been dislodged from some old Indian grave near the top, in which case it may only have been five, ten, or twenty centuries 152 TORNADO AT NATCHEZ. [CHAP. XXXI. old ; whereas, if it was really found in situ at the base of the precipice, its age would more probably exceed 100,000 years, as 1 shall endeavor to show in a subsequent chapter. Such a posi tion, in fact, if well authenticated, would prove that man had lived in North America before the last great revolution in the physical geography of this continent had been accomplished ; in other words, that our race was more ancient than the modern valley, alluvial plain, and delta of the Mississippi — nay, what is more, was antecedent to the bluffs of Port Hudson and Natchez, already described. Now that elevated fresh-water formation, as I shall by and by endeavor to show, is the remnant of a river- plain arid delta of extremely high antiquity ; and it would follow, if the human race was equally ancient, that it co-existed with one group of terrestrial mammalia, and, having survived its extinction, had seen another group of quadrupeds succeed and replace it. In our excursion through the forest, from Washington to the Mammoth ravine, I crossed the path of the last tornado, which occurred May 17, 1840, one of three which have devastated this region since the year 1809. They all came from Texas, moving along from southwest to northeast, and laid waste a long strip of country, about a mile wide. The courses of each of the three whirlwinds were within a few miles of the other, and the last threw down many houses at Natchez, unroofed others, and leveled to the ground a railway terminus, causing the abandonment of a scheme for a rapid communication between Natchez, Vicksburg, and the State of Tennessee. On each side of the path of the tornado the land was finely timbered ; but where its force had been expended, old trees lay uprooted, and a growth of young wood wras rising. Many large trunks had been broken off ten or twelve feet above the ground, and portions of the solid wood, torn and twisted into shreds, were still waving in the air. This tornado checked the progress of Natchez, as did the removal of the seat of legislature to Jackson ; but it has suffered still more, since steam navigation has been so much improved, by the all-absorbing importance acquired by New Orleans as the CHAP. XXXI.] COUNTRY-HOUSES. great emporium of the whole trade of the Mississippi. There are, however, so few bluffs on the great river, so few places where the channel will remain constant for ages to the same spot, that I can not doubt that this city must, in time, become large and prosperous. It augurs favorably of the future prospects of civilization in America, that here, as elsewhere, we found the society most agreeable in places which have been the longest settled. If the political opinions and notions of honor cherished by the majority of the citizens of Natchez, had had their due weight in the legisla tion of the state, the fair fame of Mississippi, and her credit, would have stood as high as that of any other southern state. Many of the country-houses in the neighborhood are elegant, and some of the gardens belonging to them laid out in the English, others in the French style. In the latter are seen terraces, with statues and cut evergreens, straight walks with borders of flowers, ter minated by views into the wild forest, the charms of both being heightened by contrast. Some of the hedges are made of that beautiful North American plant, the Gardenia, miscalled in England the Cape jessamine, others of the Cherokee rose, with its bright and shining leaves. It had already put forth some of its white flowers, which a month later would be in full blow. The woods here, when all the trees are in full foliage, and the tall magnolias in blossom, must be truly beautiful. But so intense is the heat, and such the danger of ague and the torment of musquitos, that, at that season, they who can afford to move, fly to some higher or more northern retreat. On the steep slope of the bluffs at Natchez, below the vertical face of shelly loam, the Judas-tree, or red-bud (Cercis. canademis), was now in full flower, displaying a blaze of pink blossoms before it has put forth any leaves. I saw four landslips on these bluffs which have occurred within the last tea years, for the springs which burst from the sand ancterra^ne. the clayey loam. They are instructive, as showing How the bluffs give way as the Mis sissippi gradually extends. \ta course eastward. There is one hollow of ancient date, caused by a similar undermining, called the Devil's Punch-bowl, a picturesque, crater-shaped basin, of G* 154 INDIAN ANTIQUITIES. [CHAP. XXXI. about 300 yards diameter at the top, and 100 yards at the bot tom, where cypresses and gum-trees are growing. At the top are seen the cotton-wood, the maple, and the magnolia, mixed with pines. The name of Natchez has been derived from an Indian tribe, and on the highest part of the bluff, on an eminence called St. Rosalie, are some Indian mounds, from which Dr. Dickeson has obtained some curious remains of pottery, showing that some of the aboriginal inhabitants of the great valley had made much greater progress in the arts than their descendants whom the Europeans drove out. One morning, close to the spot where these antiqui ties were dug up, we saw a wild-looking group of Indians, whose aspect gave no token that their contact with Europeans had tended to revive the spirit of improvement which must once have animated some of their predecessors in this region. CHAPTER XXXII. Natchez. — Vidalia and Lake Concordia. — Hibernation of Alligator. — Bonfire on Floating Raft. — Grand Gulf. — Magnolia Steamer. — Vicksburg to Jackson (Mississippi) by Railway. — Fossils on Pearl River. — Ordinary at Jackson. — Story of Transfer of State-House from Natchez. — Vote by Ballot. — Popular Election of Judges. — Voyage from Vicksburg to Mem phis. — Monotony of River Scenery. — Squall of Wind. — Actors on Board. — Negro mistaken for White. — Manners in the Backwoods. — Inquisitive- ness. — Spoiled Children. — Equality and Leveling. — Silence of English Newspapers on Oregon Question. March 15, 1846. — FROM Natchez we crossed the river, by the ferry, to Vidalia, situated on the low river plain, on a level with the base of the bluffs before described. We were accompa nied by Mr. Davis, a large proprietor, who took us to see his negro-houses, all neatly built and well whitewashed. Even in this cursory view we could perceive how much the comfort and bodily wants of the slaves had been attended to. We had now left the country where sugar and cotton are the staple products, and had just entered the region where cotton and Indian corn are cultivated together. Here, as in Louisiana, the negroes constitute half, and sometir^s more than half, the population on the borders of the Mississippi. At Vidalia we were joined by Mr. Forshey, the engineer, who went with us to Lake Concordia, a fine example of an old bend of the Mississippi, recently detached and converted into a crescent-shaped lake, surrounded by wood. It is a fine sheet of water, fifteen miles long, if measured by a curved line drawn through the middle. The old levee, or embankment, is still seen ; but it is no longer necessary to keep it in repair, for, a few years ago, the channel which once connected this bend with the main river was silted up. Opposite Natchez the depth of the Mississippi varies from 100 feet to 150 feet, but Lake Con cordia has nowhere a greater depth than 40 feet. There are 156 LAKE CONCORDIA. [CHAP. XXXII. thirteen similar lakes between the mouth of the Arkansas and Baton Pvouge, all near the Mississippi, and produced by cut-offs ; and so numerous are the channels which communicate from one to the other, that a canoe may pass, during the flood season, from Lake Concordia, and reach the Gulf of Mexico without once entering the Mississippi. We were shown a cypress tree on the borders of this deserted river bend, from under the roots of which, a few days before the time of our visit, a she alligator had come out on a warm day, the place of her hybemation appearing to be half in the mud and half in the water. She brought out with her two broods, one born in the preceding summer, which were six inches long, and the others, an older set, about a foot long. When Mr. Forshey approached them, the young ones yelped like puppies, and the old one hissed. On the shore of the lake we caught a tortoise, called here the snapping-turtle, and found that all its feet had been bitten off — devoured, our companions sup posed, by predaceous fish. The fresh-water shells, of which we obtained specimens from the lake, belong to the genera Lymnea, Planorbis, Paludina, Anchylotus, Physa, Cyclas, and Unio. Wre put up flights of water-fowl of various species, chiefly wild ducks, which were swimming about. On the top of a pole, driven into the mud near the margin of the lake, was perched a kingfisher, and two cormorants were wheeling round it, one with a fish in its mouth, which the other was trying to snatch away. The water, although much clearer than the Mississippi, was not transparent, for it had communicated, during the late inunda tions, with the great river. In this manner sediment is annually introduced into such basins, and in the course of ages Lake Con cordia may become so shallow as to support a forest of swamp timber. Some modern concretions of clay and lime, and of clay containing iron, which I picked up from the mud of the Missis sippi bordering this lake, were so like those associated with the ancient buried forest at Port Hudson, and the shelly loam of Natchez, as to confirm me in the opinion before expressed, that the cliffs there, although of very high antiquity, correspond in origin with the recent fluviatile formations of the alluvial plain. March 17. — We established ourselves in the wharf-boat at CHAP. XXXII. ] BONFIRE ON FLOATING RAFT. 157 Natchez, prepared for a start in the first steamer which would take us to Grand Gulf, fifty miles higher up. We amused our selves by watching a party of young negro boys, who collected the drift wood which bordered the river, and, having tied it together into a raft, heaped some dead branches of trees upon it, placing a layer of shavings under the pile. Having set it on fire, they pushed it'off from the shore, and exulted as they saw the floating bonfire, in the dusk of the evening, throwing a glar ing light on the bluffs, town, and shipping. The raft was car ried round and round in the great eddies near the bank, and the urchins shouted when their love of mischief was gratified by seeing the alarm of the boatmen, each of whom was observing the wandering fire with some anxiety, lest it should come too near his own craft. In the cabin of the wharf-boat we found no furniture, but were supplied with two chairs, which, like the walls and ceiling, were of unpainted wood. As it grew dark, they brought in a table and a single candle. We were not sorry when the Peytona was announced, and we were ushered into a splendid saloon, 150 feet long, lighted by two large chandeliers sus pended from the ceiling, and supplied with brilliant gas, manufac tured on board. The mattresses of our beds were clastic, made of India rubber, no unmeaning luxury, for we were awakened before morning by the bumping of the boat against one floating log after another, and, in spite of the frequent stoppage of the engine, no small damage was done to the paddle-wheels, which got entangled with the drift timber. We reached Grand Gulf when morning had scarcely dawned, and found the floor of the saloon covered with the sleeping colored servants, over whom we had to step. The river had risen twenty-five feet in two days, and was more turbid than we had yet seen it. The blulf at Grand Gulf is about 180 feet high, the upper most 60 feet, composed, as at Natchez, of yellow loam or loess, beneath which was white quartzose sand, partially concreted into solid sandstone, which is quarried here for building. From the summit, the river-plain to the westward seemed as level, blue, and boundless as the ocean. As we had now traveled two degrees of latitude northward, the spring was not more advanced 158 GRAND GULF— MAGNOLIA STEAMER. [CHAP. XXXII. than when we left New Orleans, but the woods crowning the bluffs are beautiful from the variety of trees, many of them ever greens, and we were charmed with the melody of the mocking birds, and the warm sun brought out many large and brilliantly colored butterflies, and more insects of other kinds than I had yet seen in the south. Among these were a beetle (Phaneus carnifex), with green and gold wing-cases, and a horn on the thorax. The name of bug is given to all beetles (Coleopteral) here, and does not seem to awaken the same unpleasant associa tions as it suggests to English ears. Even the elegant fire-fly is called a lightning-bug, and ladies who have diamond beetles set in brooches, ask you to admire their beautiful bugs. The Lon doners, by way of compensation, miscall the cockroach a black beetle. From Grand Gulf we embarked in the Magnolia, which had brought my wife to Natchez, and, having since made a trip to St. Louis and New Orleans, was on its return up the river. It is a new boat, and, among other improvements, has a separate sleeping cabin for the colored servants. The furniture in the principal saloon is of fine Utrecht velvet, and the hanging lusters for gas very brilliant : the beds excellent ; but the powerful vibration caused by the machinery far from agreeable. Our state room contained a chest of drawers, and cupboards for hang ing up ladies' dresses. Ample time was allowed for dinner, and we thought the fare only too sumptuous. The repast began with turtle soup, and two kinds of fish ; then followed a variety of made dishes, admirably cooked, and then a course of cocoa-nut pies, jellies, preserved bananas, oranges, grapes, and ice-creams, concluding with coffee. The claret was excellent, and it may seem strange, at first, that they who indulge in such luxuries, can drink freely of the opaque, unfiltered water of the Mississippi. But this fluid has, at least the merit of being cool on a hot day, and is believed to be very wholesome. We found it pleasant to the taste, however untempting to the sight. Few of the praises bestowed by Denham on the Thames can be lavished on the Mississippi ; for, though deep, it is not clear, nor is it " without o'erflowing full." Yet, in spite of the occasional undermining CHAP. XXXII.] VICKSBURG TO JACKSON. 159 of forests on its banks, it may be truly characterized as " strong, without rage ;" absorbing, as it does, in its course, one great tributary after another, several of them scarcely inferior in width to itself, without widening its channel, and in this manner car rying down noiselessly to the sea its vast column of water and solid matter, while the greater part of its alluvial plain is left undisturbed. A settler at Natchez told us he had lived on the great river long enough to admire it, for the ease with which it performs its mighty work ; and to fear it, so often had he witnessed the wreck of vessels and the loss of lives. " If you fall overboard," he said, " in the middle of the Atlantic, you may rise again and be saved ; but here you are sucked down by an eddy, and the waters, closing over you. are so turbid, that you are never seen again." March 19. — At Vicksburg, where we next landed, I found the bluffs, forming the eastern boundary of the great plain, similar, in their upper part, to those of Natchez ; but beneath the fresh water loam and sand were seen, at the base of the cliffs, a marine tertiary deposit, of the Eocene period, in which we collected many shells and corals. (See fig. 10, p. 193 ; and 3, fig. 11, p. 196.) Leaving my wile to rest at the hotel, I made a rapid trip by railway, fifty-five miles eastward, to Jackson, the capital of the State of Mississippi. For the first ten miles, the cars traversed a table-land, corresponding in height with the summit of the bluff at Vicksburg, and preserving an even surface, except where gullies had been hollowed out in the soft shelly loam or loess. These are numerous, and it had been necessary to throw bridges over many of them so as to preserve the level of the road. It was curious to observe, in the cuttings made through the loam, that each precipitous face retained its perpendicularity, as in natural sections, although composed of materials wholly uriconsolidated. Farther to the east, the Eocene strata, belonging to the same series, which are seen at the bottom of the bluffs at Vicksburg, rise up to the surface from beneath the fresh-water loam, which attains an elevation of about 250 feet above the sea, and then gives place to older rocks. We passed through large forests of oaks and beeches, just 1GO FOSSILS ON PEARL RTVER. [CHAP. XXXII. coming into leaf, in which Avere some green hollies. The red- bud, in. blossom, was conspicuous in some of the woods. In the wet grounds were cane-brakes, willows, and magnolias. I observed, in a large clearing, three plows following each other, one guided by a man, and the others each by a negro woman. When we reached the Big Black River, twelve miles from Vicksburg, we passed over a long wooden bridge arid viaduct, built on piles, nearly a mile in length. In about four hours, we arrived at the town of Jackson. I was wholly without letters of introduction, having suddenly determined on this excursion, arid knew not the name of a single individual ; which I regretted the more, as I had only a few hours of daylight at my disposal, and was to return by the cars at noon the day following. I inquired, as I had often done in France on similar occasions, for the nearest pharmacien, or chemist, and, being shown a shop, asked if they knew any one who was interested in geology. The chemist informed me that Dr. Gist, a physician, lodged in the floor above, and might assist me. Fortunately, this gentleman was at home, and, telling me he had read my work on Geology, he presented me with some fossil shells and corals collected by him in the neighborhood ; and, within ten minutes of my " landing" from the cars, \ve were on our way together to explore the dried-up channel of a small tributary of the Pearl River, where I found a rich harvest of fossil marine shells and zoophytes. When we parted, my excellent guide agreed to accompany me, early the next morning, many miles in another direction. On entering my hotel, after dark, I was informed that supper was ready, and was conducted to a large ordinary, crowded chiefly by lawyers, who were attending the courts here. The landlord, General A , formerly of the Tennessee militia, played the part of master of the ceremonies, much to my amusement. He first obtained silence by exclaiming, with the loud voice of a herald, " Gentlemen, we are a great people," and then called out the names of all the viands on his long table and sideboard, beginning with " Beef-steak, with or without onions, roast turkey, pork, hominy, fish, eggs, &c., and ending with a list of various drink ables, the last of which was " tea, foreign and domestic." CHAP. XXXII.] TRANSFER OF STATE-HOUSE. Id Curiosity led me to order the last-mentioned beverage ; but I soon repented, finding it to be a liquid of a pink color, made of the root of the sassafras tree, and having a very medicinal taste. I was told that many here drink it for their health ; but the general, seeing that I did not relish it, supplied me with some good " foreign" tea. My host then introduced me to several of the lawyers who sat near me, which gave me an opportunity of asking whether there was any truth in the story told me by some of the Whigs at New Orleans, of the manner in which the seat of legislature had been transferred from Natchez to Jackson. I related the story, which was as follows : — ' ' Natchez was the metropolis of the state, and the chief town of Adams County, which was so wealthy as to pay a third of all the taxes in Mississippi. It was a city to which the richest and best-informed citizens resorted, representing both the landed and moneyed interests of the state. It was, moreover, a center of communication, because it com manded the navigation of the great river. That the Houses of Legislature should meet here, was so natural and convenient, so fitted to promote good government, that the Democratic party could not be expected to put up, for many years, with an arrange ment of affairs so reasonable and advantageous. They accord ingly decided, by a majority, that some change must be made, and gave orders to a surveyor to discover the exact geographical center of the state. He found it in a wilderness, about fifty miles in a straight line east of Natchez, and pointed out an old cypress tree, in the middle of a swamp, accessible only by a canoe, as the spot they were in search of. This was welcome news ; all might now be placed on a footing of equality, the spot being equally inaccessible and inconvenient for all. When the architect, how ever, came to build the capitol, he took the liberty, instead of erecting the edifice on piles in the center of the swamp, to place it on an adjoining rising ground, from which they had cleared away the native wood, a serious abandonment of principle, as it was several hundred yards from the true geographical center.'1 When my auditors had done laughing at this Louisiana version of a passage in their history, they said, the tale, after all, was not so exaggerated as it might have been, considering the vexation 1G2 VOTE BY BALLOT. [CHAP. XXXIT. under which the New Orleans Whigs were smarting, in having to go to Baton Rouge. They could show me, they said, the swamp on the Pearl River, which must have been alluded to. That river, though now only beatable, might, they declared, be made navigable to steamboats, when the rafts of drift timber were cleared away, and they might then have a direct commer cial intercourse with the Gulf of Mexico. The soil, also, sur rounding Jackson, had proved to be very fertile, and the railway had brought the place within three or four hours of Natchez, now their port. In short, their town was flourishing, by aid of natural advantages, and the patronage of the Legislature and Law Courts. Next day, after a geological excursion, I wras taken to see the State House and Governor's Mansion, both handsome and com modious, arid built in a good style of architecture, but at great expense, at a time when the price of labor happened to be un usually high. I heard much regret expressed at the debts they had incurred, and at the refusal to acknowledge them in 1841. One lawyer, a member of the Legislature, declared his conviction that the repudiation of the state debt would not have been carried in his county, but for the facility afforded by secret voting. The same individuals, he said, who openly professed a more honorable line of conduct, must, out of selfishness, have taken advantage of the ballot-box to evade an increase of taxation, otherwise there could riot have been a majority in favor of disowning their liabil ities. This wras one of the few instances in which I heard the ballot condemned in the United States ; yet the position of the laboring and middle classes is, comparatively, so independent here, in relation to their rich employers, that the chief arguments relied upon in England in favor of secret voting, would seem to be inapplicable. The dependence of the judges, for their election, on the popular suffrage, appears to have been carried farther in Mississippi than in any other state. I was told that rival candidates for the bench and chancellorship, have been known to canvass for votes in taverns, and have been asked what construction they put on certain statutes relating to banks chartered by the state, just as, in an ordinary election for representatives, men are asked what CHAP. XXXII.] VICKSBURG TO MEMPHIS. 163 are their opinions, and how they would vote on certain questions. I met with more men of property in Mississippi who spoke as if they belonged to an oppressed class, governed by a rude, ignorant, and coarse democracy, than in any other part of my tour. "Many of our poorest citizens," they said, " would freely admit, that nothing is so difficult, for the individual, as self-government, and yet hold that nothing is so easy and safe as self-government for the million, even where education has been carried no farther than here, where there are still seven counties without a single school-house, and large districts where the inhabitants have but recently been con verted to Christianity by itinerant Methodists. They forgot that even honorable and enlightened men will sometimes do, in their corporate capacity, what each individual would be ashamed to do if he acted singly." When I heard these remarks, and reflected that even in those parts of the state where the whites are most advanced, as in Adams County, more than half the population are slaves, I felt more surprise that English capitalists had lent so much money to Mississippi, than that they had repented of it. At the same time there is more hope for the future, for education must come. The town of Vicksburg is beautifully situated on the slope of a wooded bluff, about 180 feet high, and walks might be made, commanding the river, which would be delightful. At present no one can roam along the paths in the suburbs, as they are dis gracefully filthy. * We took our passage in the Andrew Jackson steamer, from Vicksburg to Memphis, a distance of 390 miles, and paid only six dollars each (25 shillings), board and lodging included. The monotony of the scenery on the great river for several hundred miles together, is such as to grow wearisome. Scarcely any ves sels with sails are seen, all the old schooners and smaller craft having been superseded by the great steam-ships. The traveler becomes tired of always seeing a caving bank on one side, and an advancing sand-bar, covered with willows and poplars, on the * For observations on the Geology of Jackson and Vicksburg, see a paper by the Author, Journ. of Geol. Soc. London, vol. iv. p. 15, 1847, and Silli- man's Journal, Second Series, vol. iv. p. 186, Sept. 1847. 1G4 MONOTONY OF SCENERY. [CHAP. XXXII. other ; the successive growths of young trees rising to greater heights, one tier above another, as before described, below New Orleans. The water, at this season, is too turbid to reflect the sky or the trees on its bank. The aspect of things, day after day, is so exactly similar, that it might seem as necessary to take astronomical observations, in order to discover what progress one lias made, as if the voyage were in mid-Atlantic. That our course is northward, is indicated by the willows on the banks growing less green, and a diminishing quantity of gray moss hanging from the trees. The red maple has also disappeared. When I landed at wooding stations, I saw, on the damp ground beneath the trees, abundance of mosses, with scarcely a blade of grass, while the only wild flowers w^ere a few violets and a white bramble. The young leaves of the poplars are most fragrant in the night air. We were now in latitude 34° north, passing the mouths of the Arkansas and White rivers. The village of Napoleon, 212 miles above Vicksburg, at the mouth of the Arkansas, had suffered much by the floods of ] 844. Its red, muddy waters are hardly mixed up thoroughly with the Mississippi till they reach Vicksburg. They often bring down much ice into the Mississippi. The White River is said to be navigable for about six hundred miles above its mouth. Our steamer, the Andrew Jackson, bound for Cincinnati, car rying a heavy cargo of molasses, was eight feet deep in the water. To avoid the drift wood, which impeded her progress, the captain, on arriving at Island Eighty-four (for they are all numbered, beginning from the mouth of the Ohio), determined to take a short cut between that island, and the left river bank. The lead was heaved, and the decreasing depth, from ten feet to eight and a half, was called out ; our vessel then grazed the bot tom for a moment, but fortunately got off again. There wras so much sameness in the navigation, that such an incident was quite a relief. Soon afterward, March 23d, some variety was afforded by a squall of wind, accompanied by lightning. I never expected to see waves of such magnitude, and was surprised to learn, that in some reaches, where the water extends ten miles in a straight line, a strong wind blowing against the current will CHA.P. XXXII.] ACTORS ON BOARD. 165 cause large steamers to pitch so as to make many passengers sea sick ; but this rarely happens. In the night we had often to draw up to the bank, wherever a signal-fire was lighted, finding sometimes a single passenger waiting to be taken on board. There were many actors on board, and, among others, a pleasing young woman, who turned out to be the manager's wife, returning with her family of young children and sick hus band from Vicksburg, where she complained that the drama was at a low ebb, and where, as in many other cities in the south, the drunken habits of the inferior actors made the profession by no means a pleasant one for a woman. She was longing for an engagement in some " eastern theater," where, she told rny wife, she would willingly take less pay, and would not object to under take the part of " first old woman" for eighteen dollars a week, as most of the actresses, being desirous of looking young and pretty, compete eagerly for the character of " first juvenile." She liked much to act chambermaid, as then she was not expected to learn her part so accurately. She had a real feeling of enthusiasm for her art, and great admiration for Mrs. Kean, and spoke with satisfaction of having once acted second to her when she was Miss Ellen Tree. During her husband's illness at Vicksburg, she had been obliged to take the management of the theater herself, and had good reason to lament that the temperance move ment had not reached so far west. The physician, after attend ing his patient for many weeks in a fever, remitted to them a bill of fifty dollars, one only of many similar acts of generosity in the members of this profession which came to my knowledge in the course of my tour. This actress had with her a young maid, fairer than many an English brunette, but who, though a free woman, did not happen to belong to the white aristocracy. The stewardess came into the cabin and summoned her to dinner, and she, doing as she was bid, sat down at the second table, where the officers of the ship and the white children were dining. When her repast was half finished, her master and mistress sud denly discovered the prodigious breach of decorum which their attendant was perpetrating, and, calling her away from the table, began explaining to one lady after another, especially those with ItiG MANNERS IN THE BACKWOODS. [CHAP, XXXII. whose children she had been sitting, that she was really a good girl, who knew no better. The stewardess also, knowing she should incur blame, came and apologized for her mistake, ob serving that the girl was quite undistinguishable by her com plexion from a white. There was a quadroon lady on board, of very respectable appearance and manners, who w^as taking all her meals in her own state-room, thus avoiding the risk of meet ing with similar indignities. It is not surprising, in such a state of society, that they who belong to the degraded race, should make every effort to conceal the fact ; or, if that be impossible, to assimilate themselves, as far as they can. to individuals of the dominant race. In proportion to the mixture of white blood, the woolly, short hair of the negro lengthens and straightens, and the ambition of the black women is to contend with nature in tortur ing their hair, by combing and plaiting, till it resembles, as near as possible, the flowing locks of the whites. At one of the wooding stations, a countryman came on board with his wife, a half-breed Indian. She had straight black hair, and a soft, mild eye. She sat at table with us, taking her place on terms of perfect equality, no distinction of caste being made in this case. As I was pacing the deck, one passenger after another eyed my short-sight glass, suspended by a ribbon round my neck, with much curiosity. Some of them asked me to read for them the name inscribed on the stern of a steamer so far off that I doubted whether a good telescope would have enabled me to do more than discern the exact place where the name was written. Others, abruptly seizing the glass, without leave or apology, brought their heads into close contact with mine, and, looking through it, ex claimed, in a disappointed and half reproachful tone, that they could see nothing. Meanwhile, the wives and daughters of pas sengers of the same class, were sitting idle in the ladies' cabin, occasionally taking my wife's embroidery out of her hand, without asking leave, and examining it, with many comments, usually, however, in a complimentary strain. To one who is studying the geology of the valley of the Mississippi, the society of such companions may be endurable for a few weeks. He ought to recollect that they form the great majority of those who support CHAI». XXXII.] INQUISITIVENESS. 167 these noble steamers, without which such researches could not be pursued except by an. indefinite sacrifice of time. But \vo sometimes doubted how far an English party, traveling1 for mere amusement, would enjoy themselves. If they venture on tho experiment, they had better not take with them an English maid-servant, unless they are prepared for her being transformed into an equal. It would be safer to engage some one of that too numerous class, commonly called "humble companions/' who might occasionally enter into society with them. Ladies who can dispense with such assistance, will find the maids in the inns, whether white or colored, most attentive. We were not asked more questions in regard to our private affairs than we had often been accustomed to submit to when traveling in France and Scotland. Nor had I any reason to complain ; for when I had satisfied the curious as to my age, the number of my children, how we liked the country, and many other particulars, often asked very abruptly by one just come on board, I had no ceremony in retaliating on him, and putting to him as many queries in my turn. Every one must admit that the answers you commonly receive are most intelligent. Americans of the higher classes seemed more put out than we were, when thus catechised.' One of them, before we left Boston, as if determined that nothing should surprise me, related many diverting anecdotes to illustrate the inquisitive turn of his countrymen. Among other stories he gave a lively description of a New Englander who was seated by a reserved companion in a railway car, and who, by way of beginning a conversation, said, " Are you a bachelor ?" To which the other replied, drily, " No, I'm not." — "You are a married man ?" continued he. — " No, I'm not." — " Then you must be a widower?" — "No, I'm not." Here there was a short pause ; but the undaunted querist returned to the charge, observ ing, " If your are neither a bachelor, nor a married man, nor a widower, what in the world can you be?" — " If you must know," said the other, " I'm a divorced man !" Another story, told me by the same friend, was that a gentle man being asked, in a stage coach, how he had lost his leg, made his fellow travelers promise that if he told them they would put SPOILT CHILDREN. [CHAP. XXXII. no more questions on the subject. He then said, " It was bitten off." To have thus precluded them for the rest of a long jour ney from asking how it was bitten off, was a truly ingenious method of putting impertinent curiosity on the rack. ftVhen my wife first entered the ladies' cabin, she found every one of the numerous rocking-chairs filled with a mother suckling an infant. As none of them had nurses or servants, all their other children were at large, and might have been a great resource to passengers suflering from ennui, had they been under tolerable control. As it was, they were so riotous and undisciplined, as to be the torment of all who approached them. " How fortunate you are," said one of the mothers to my wrife, " to be without children ; they are so ungovernable, and, if you switch them, they sulk, or go into hysterics." The threat of " I'll switch you," is forever vociferated in an angry tone, but never carried into execu tion. One genteel and pleasing young lady sat down by my wife, and began conversation by saying, £; You hate children, don't you ?" intimating that such were her own feelings. A medical man, in. large practice, in one of the southern states, told us he often lost young patients in fevers, and other cases where excitement of the nerves was dangerous, by the habitual inability of the parents to exert the least command over their children. We saw an instance where a young girl, in considerable danger, threw the medicine into the physician's face, and heaped most abusive epithets upon him. The Director of the State Penitentiary, in Georgia, told me, that he had been at some pains to trace out the history of the most desperate characters under his charge, and found that they had been invariably spoilt children ; and, he added, if young Americans were not called upon to act for themselves at so early an age, and undergo the rubs and discipline of the world, they would be more vicious arid immoral than the people of any other nation. Yet there is no country where children ought to be so great a blessing, or where they can be so easily provided for. Parents have not the excuse of Mrs. MacClarty, in the " Cottag ers of Glenburnie," when she exclaims, " If I don't give the boy his own way, what else have I to give him ?" but it is probably because so many of these western settlers have risen recently from CHAP. XXXil.l EQUALITY AND LEVELING. 169 Mrs. MacClarty's grade in society, that they have retained her maxims for the management of their children ; for the young people in the families of the best class of society in the United States, are often kept in as good order, and are as engaging in their manners, as they are in any part of Europe. Many young Americans have been sent to school in Switzer land, and I have heard their teachers, who found them less manageable than English or Swiss boys, maintain that they must all of them have some dash of wild Indian blood in their veins. Englishmen, on the other hand, sometimes attribute the same character to republican institutions ; but, in fact, they are spoilt long before they are old enough to know that they are not born under an absolute monarchy. Some officers of the army, who had been educated at West Point, a lieutenant in the navy, and a judge, with his family, from a southern state, were agreeable companions on this voyage, and differed as much in manners from the majority of our mess mates, as persons of the same rank in Europe would have done. There seemed, to us, to be a great want, in such steamers, of a second cabin, at a price intermediate between that of the first cabin and the deck. A poor emigrant, who waB roughing it in the latter place, remarked to me truly, that they were treated there like dogs, and had nothing but a plank to sleep upon. He was paying highly for his wife and family, who had places in the first cabin. Among all who have paid for these, a recogni tion of perfect equality is scrupulously exacted. Not only would a man of rank and ancient family, but one of the most refined manners, and superior knowledge and education, find himself treated as entitled to no more deference or respect than the rud est traveler. Plato's definition of a man, " bipes implume," "a featherless biped," would be most appropriate to one who was journeying in such company. To a certain extent, however, the manners of the ruder members of this society are improved by such intercourse, and there is some leveling up as well as level ing down. The European traveler must also bear in mind, that it would be no discredit to those who are settling in this wilder ness — especially when Europe pours into it, annually, her hun- VOL. I!. II 170 ENGLISH NEWSPAPERS. [CHAP. XXXII. dreds of thousands of ignorant and disappointed emigrants — if the accommodation was of the rudest kind ; if there were no steamers in whose machinery the latest improvements had been, adopted, many of them invented in the United States ; and if the cabin was not provided with good libraries, or the table cov ered with newspapers, literary magazines, and reviews. It is precisely because there is so much civilization in the western states, that foreigners criticise them unfairly, contrasting their condition with the highest standard of older countries. The authority of the captain is absolute, and he does not hesi tate, if any unruly spirit is refractory, and refuses to conform to the regulations of the ship, to put him ashore at the nearest place on the bank where he can be landed ; but I never hap pened to see so strong a measure resorted to. The newspapers on the cabin table of the Andrew Jackson had a column headed in capitals, " Five Weeks later from Eu rope." The mail packet had been detained by adverse winds longer than usual, and the uneasiness respecting the chances of a war with England, still the subject of debate in Congress, had risen to a great height. Many lovers of peace had misgiving's lest the English democracy, growing at last impatient, should express themselves with violence, and excite the war party here. The first glance at the news relieved them from anxiety, for the English were entirely absorbed with Free Trade, Cheap Bread, and the admission of foreign grain without duty. The Cabinet were too well satisfied that the people's attention was drawn off from foreign affairs to obtrude the American question unneces sarily on their attention. One of the politicians on board, who had been reading an account of the proceedings of the Anti-Corn- Law League, and the parliamentary debates on the Corn Duties, confessed to me, that the omission of all allusion to America — the English being so entirely occupied with their domestic affairs — Avounded his feelings, "Here we have been talking," he said, "for three months about nothing else but Oregon, imagining that the whole world was looking on in suspense, at this momentous debate, and even in Great Britain it has been forgotten for five entire weeks ! What an absurd figure we are cutting !" CHAPTER XXXIII. Bluffs at Memphis. — New Madrid. — No Inn. — Undermining of River Bank. — Examination of Country shaken by Earthquake of 1811-12. — Effects of Passage of Waves through Alluvial Soil. — Circular Cavities or Sand- Bursts. — Open Fissures. — Lake Eulalie drained by Shocks. — Borders of Sunk Country, west of New Madrid. — Dead Trees standing erect. — A slight Shock felt. — Trade in Peltries increased by Earthquake. — Trees erect in new-formed Lakes. — Indian Tradition of Shocks. — Dreary Forest Scene. — Rough Quarters. — Slavery in Missouri. March 24, 1816. — AT length we reached Memphis, in the State of Tennessee. The town on which this ancient and vener able name is conferred, appears the newest of the large places we have yet seen on the Mississippi. It is growing with great rapidity, standing on a bluff now fifty-two feet above the level of the water when the river is high. The cliff is the abrupt termination of deposits similar to those of fresh-water origin, which I have before alluded to at Natchez and Vicksburg. A mass of yellow loarn, forty feet thick, reposes on sand with quartz pebbles, which rests on clay, not visible at the time of my visit. Such a site for a town, in spite of the slow undermining of the cliffs, is permanent by comparison with the ordinary banks of the river for hundreds of miles continuously ; for, as a general rule, the stream in the alluvial plain is either encroaching a foot or more annually, so as to wash away buildings, if there be any on the bank, or is retreating, so that a port soon becomes an inland town. The people of Memphis are ambitious that their city should be a great naval arsenal, and there are considerable naval stores here ; but as frigates require from eighteen to twenty- three feet water, and men-of-war thirty feet, while the bar at the mouth of the Mississippi affords at present no more than six teen feet water, their hopes can riot be realized till a ship canal is made from some point on the Mississippi to the Gulf of Mexico. After we left Memphis, we were shown, on the Tennessee 172 MEW MADRID. [CHAP. XXXIIL bank of the river, a log cabin, where they said General Jackson began his career ; one of his claims to popularity with the demo cratic party consisting in his having risen from a very humble origin. The advantages of a more liberal education, which a rival might have possessed who had begun life in easier circum stances, would not have countervailed, in the present stage of progress of the Union, the prestige which attaches to the idea of a man's having made his way by his own merits. JMarcli 25. — From Memphis we sailed in a smaller steamer for 170 miles, first between the states of Tennessee and Arkan sas, and then between Tennessee and Missouri, and arrived very late at night at New Madrid, a small village on the western bank of the river, where I intended to stay and make geological observations on the region shaken by the great earthquake of 181 1—12. So many of our American friends had tried to dissuade us from sojourning in so rude a place, that we were prepared for the worst. In the wharf-boat, at least, I expected to find a bed for the first night, and proposed to seek accommodation elsewhere the next day ; but, to my dismay, the keeper of this floating tavern told me, when I landed, that he had just come there, had nothing as yet " fixed," and could not receive us. I also learnt that the only inn in New Madrid had been given up for want of custom. Leaving, therefore, my wife sitting by the stove in the wharf-boat, and taking a negro as my guide, I began to pace the dark and silent streets. First I applied in vain for admit tance at the old tavern, then to a storekeeper in the neighbor hood, who informed me that a German baker, near the river, sometim.es took in lodgers. I next roused this man and his wife from their slumbers ; their only spare room was occupied, but they asked their lodger if he would give it up to us. No sum of money would have bribed him to comply, as I was satisfied when I knew him better, but his good nature led him at once to assent cheerfully. We were soon shown into the apartment, a kind of scullery, with a mattress on the floor, on which we slept, and did not make our appearance next morning till half-past eight o'clock. We then apologized, fearing we had kept them waiting for breakfast. They said, good humoredly, they had CHAP. XXXIII.] UNDERMINING OF RIVER-BANK. 173 indeed waited from six o'clock, and it was now near their dinner time ! The young German, originally from near Strasburg, a man of simple manners, regarded himself as belonging to a differ ent station in society, and would have acted as waiter till we had finished our repast, had not his wife, a native-born American, from the State of Indiana, insisted on his sitting down to table. They were so poor, that they had no servants, not even a negro boy or girl, and two children to look after. The fare was of the humblest kind, bread of Indian corn, bacon, and thick coffee. Some of the indispensable articles of the breakfast table equipage had been purchased, as we afterward discovered, expressly for our use that morning. The lodger, " Uncle John," was an old bachelor in easy circumstances, fond of fishing, who had come here to indulge in that sport. He was an old pilot, who had visited half the ports in the Mediterranean, as well as Great Britain, and was quite a character. He could tell many a good story of his adventures, and, like many natives of Louisiana, could bear to be contradicted on any point rather than hear the healthiness of New Orleans called in question. His manners, and those of our host and hostess toward each other and to us, were very polite, and never approached undue familiarity. Uncle John assured me that the Mississippi is now flowing where New Madrid stood in 1811, and that the old grave-yard has traveled over from the State of Missouri into Kentucky. How this had happened, it was easy for me to divine when I went out after breakfast to look at the place by daylight. The river bank is now about twenty -five feet high, and would be forty-five feet at the lowest water level. It is giving way rapid ly, three houses having fallen in during the last week, and some proprietors are in the act of shifting their quarters half a mile inland. At the bottom of the wasting bank, there is a semi-fluid quick-sand, which greatly accelerates the process of destruction. Yesterday, the ruins of a house, with the wooden fence of a gar den, were precipitated into the river, and some of the wreck has formed a talus, up which I saw some hogs, after several unsuc cessful attempts, clamber at last into a garden, where they began to uproot the flowers. The steamboats, which are now sailing 174 EARTHQUAKE OF 1811-12. [CHAP. XXXITI. close to the bank, will, in a few years, pass freely over the site of the humble mansion where we had been sleeping ; and the geographer, in constructing a map half a century hence, may have to transfer to the State of Kentucky, the spot where I saw a garden flourish. I examined the perpendicular face of the bank with some interest, as exemplifying the kind of deposits which the Missis sippi throws down near its margin. They differ in no way from accumulations of sand and loam of high antiquity with which the geologist is familiar ; some beds are made up of hori zontal layers, in others they are slanting, or in what is called cross stratification. Some are white, others yellow, and here and there a seam of black carbonaceous matter, derived apparent ly from the destruction of older strata, is conspicuous. I next set out on an excursion to examine those districts, where I heard that some superficial effects of the great earth quake of 1811 were still visible. The reader should be remind ed that this convulsion occurred contemporaneously with one of the most fatal earthquakes of South America, when the towns of Guayra and Caraccas were laid in ruins. The shocks were also felt in South Carolina. Humboldt has remarked that the shocks of New Madrid are the only examples on record, of the ground having quaked almost incessantly for three months, at a point so far remote from any active volcano. The shocks were most violent in part of the region called the Little Prairie, to the southward of New Madrid, and they extended as far south as the river St. Francis, and, northward, as far as the mouth of the Ohio. Although the country was thinly settled, and most of the houses built of logs, the loss of life was considerable. From accounts published at the time, it appears that the grave yard of New Madrid was precipitated into the Mississippi, the banks of which gave way in many places, and the ground swelled up so that the current of the river flowed backward for a time, carrying several flat boats northward, against the stream. In various parts of the region above alluded to as having been con vulsed, lakes twenty miles and upward in extent were formed, while others which pre-existed were drained.* Hundreds of * SiJliman's Journal, vol. xv. 1829. CHAP. XXXIIL] SAND-BURSTS. 175 chasms opened, and new islands appeared in the Mississippi and its tributaries. Flint, the geographer, who visited the country seven years after the event, says that, at the time of his visit, a district west of New Madrid still remained covered with water, and that the neighboring forest presented a scene of great con fusion — many trees standing inclined in every direction, and others having their trunks and branches broken. He also saw hundreds of deep chasms remaining in the alluvial soil, which were produced, according to the inhabitants, by the bursting of the earth, which rose in great undulations, and discharged vast volumes of water, sand, and coaly matter, thrown up as high as the tops of the trees. As the shocks lasted throughout a period of three months, the country people remarked that, in given dis tricts, there were certain prevailing directions in which these fis sures opened, arid they accordingly felled the tallest trees, making them fall at right angles to the direction of the chasms. By stationing themselves on these, they often escaped being swal lowed up when the earth opened beneath them. Some of the shocks were perpendicular, while others, much more desolating, were horizontal, or moved along like great waves. Before I left New Orleans, Mr. Bringier, the engineer, related to me that he was on horseback near New Madrid, in 1811, when some of the severest shocks were experienced, and that, as the waves advanced, he saw the trees bend down, and often, the instant afterward, when in the act of recovering their position, meet the boughs of other trees similarly inclined, so as to become interlocked, being prevented from righting themselves again. The transit of the wave through the woods was marked by the crash ing noise of countless branches, first heard on one side and then on the other. At the same time powerful jets of water, mixed with sand, mud, and bituminous coaly shale, were cast up with such force, that both horse and rider might have perished, had the undulating ground happened to burst immediately beneath them. He also told me that circular cavities, called sink-holes, were formed where the principal fountains of mud and water were thrown up. Hearing that some of these cavities still existed near the town, 176 LAKE EULALIE. [CHAP. XXXIII. I went to see one of them, three quarters of a mile to the west ward. There I found a nearly circular hollow, ten yards wide, and five feet deep, with a smaller one near it, and I observed, scattered about the surrounding level ground, fragments of black bituminous shale, with much white sand. Within a distance of a few hundred yards, were five more of these " sand-bursts," or " sand-blows," as they are sometimes termed here, and, rather more than a mile farther west, near the house of Mr. Savors, my guide pointed out to me what he called " the sink-hole where the negro was drowned." It is a striking object, interrupting the regularity of a flat plain, the .sides very steep, and twenty- eight feet deep from the top to the water's edge. The water now standing in the bottom is said to have been originally very deep, but has grown shallow by the washing in of sand, and the crumbling of the bank caused by the feet of cattle coming to drink. I was assured that many wagon loads of matter were cast up out of this hollow, and the quantity must have been con siderable to account for the void ; yet the pieces of lignite, and the quantity of sand now heaped on the level plain near its borders, would not suffice to fill one-tenth part of the cavity. Perhaps a part of the ejected substance may have been swallowed up again, and the rest may have been so mixed with water, as to have spread freely like a fluid over the soil. My attention was next drawn to the bed of what was once a lake, called Eulalie ; Mr. W. Hunter, the proprietor of the estate, accompanying -me to the spot. The bottom, now dried up, is about 300 yards long, by 100 yards in width, and chiefly com posed of clay, covered with trees, the whole of them less than thirty-four years old. They consist of cotton- wood (Populus angulata), willows, the honey locust, and other species. Some single cotton-wood trees have grown so fast as to be near two and a half feet in diameter, and had not my guide known their age accurately, I should have suspected their origin to have been prior to 1811. All the species on the bottom differ from those covering the surrounding higher ground, which is more elevated by twelve or fifteen feet. Here the hickory, the black and white oak, the gum, and other trees, many of them of ancient date, are CHAP. XXXIII.] EXCURSION TO "SUNK COUNTRY." 177 seen to flourish. On all sides, the ascent from the old bed of the lake to its boundary, is by a steep slope, on ascending which you reach a platform on a level with the top of the bank of the Mississippi, which is about a mile distant. Mr. Hunter in formed me that Lake Eulalie was formerly filled with clear water, and abounded in fish, until it was suddenly drained by the earthquake. In the clayey bottom, I traced the course of two parallel fissures, by which the waters escaped. They are separated from each other by a distance of about eight yards, and are not yet entirely closed. Near their edges, much sand and coal shale lie scattered, which were throwrn out of them when they first opened. In regard to the origin of this black bituminous shale, so abundantly cast out of chasms in this region, it belongs to the alluvial formation, and is found, in digging wells, fifteen feet deep, or sometimes nearer the surface. It was probably drifted down at a former period by the current of the Mississippi, from the coal-fields farther north. Having learned that still more striking monuments of the earthquake were to be seen in the territory farther to the west ward of New Madrid, I endeavored, but in vain, to hire a horse. At length a merchant's widow kindly lent me a steed. To pro cure a guide was impossible, all hands being fully employed. I therefore set out alone through the forest, skirting the borders of a swamp called the Bayou St. John, where I observed a great many fallen trees, and others dead and leafless, but standing erect. After riding some miles, I found my way to a farm, the owner of which had witnessed the earthquake when a child. He described to me the camping out of the people in the night when the first shocks occurred, and how some were wounded by the falling of chimneys, and the bodies of others drawn out of the ruins. He confirmed the published statements of the inhabitants having availed themselves of fallen trees to avoid being engulfed in open fissures, and I afterward heard that this singular mode of escape had been adopted in distant places, between which there had been no communication, and that even children threw themselves on the felled trunks. My new acquaintance then H* 178 SLIGHT SHOCK FELT. [CHAP. XXXIII. took me to see several fissures still open, which had been caused by the undulatory movement of the ground, some of them jagged, others even and straight. I traced two of them continuously for more than half a mile, and found that a few were parallel ; but, on the whole, they varied greatly in direction, some being ten and others forty-five degrees west of north. I might easily have mistaken them for artificial trenches, if my companion had not known them within his recollection to have been " as deep as wells." Sand and black shale were strewed along their edges. They were most of them from two to four feet wide, and five or six feet deep ; but the action of rains, frost, and occasional inun dations, and above all the leaves of the forest blown into them every autumn in countless numbers, have done much to fill them up. Continuing my ride, I came to the house and farm of Mr. Love, who had long resided in this district, and he took me to part of the forest, on the borders of what is called the " sunk country," where all the trees of a date prior to 1811, although standing erect and entire, are dead and leafless. They are chiefly oaks and walnuts, with trunks three or four feet in diameter, and many of them 200 years old. They are supposed to have been killed by the loosening of the roots during the repeated undulations which passed through the soil for three months in succession. The higher level plain, where these dead trees stand, terminates abruptly toward the Bayou St. John, and the sudden descent of eight or ten feet throughout an area four or five miles long, and fifty or sixty broad, was caused, my informant assured me, by the earthquake. At the lower level are seen cypresses and cotton- wood, and other trees which delight in wet ground, all newer than 1812. I was told that there are some places where the descent from the upper level to that of the sunk country is not less than twenty and even thirty feet. In part of this sunk ground I saw not only dead oaks and hickory still erect, but aged gum-trees also and cypresses (Cupressus disticha). While I was riding with Mr. Love he stopped his horse, and asked me if I did not feel the shock of an earthquake. When my attention was called to it, I fancied I had perceived it, but was not sure. He said they were frequent, although he had not CHAP. XXXIII.] "SUNK COUNTRY." 179 felt one for the last fortnight. It was now three years since they had been seriously alarmed by any movement. We looked at our watches, and when we returned to the farm he inquired of the family if any thing had happened. They said they had felt a shock, and heard a sound like distant thunder, at twenty-five minutes past eleven o'clock, which agreed exactly with the time when my companion had felt the motion. If the information I obtained from several quarters be correct, in regard to the country permanently submerged by the earth quake of 1811—12, the area must exceed in magnitude what was stated in former accounts. The " sunk country," I am told, extends along the course of the White Water and its tributaries for a distance of between seventy and eighty miles north and south, and thirty miles east and west. A trapper, who had been hunting on the Little River, told me, that large spaces there were obviously under water, owing to the great shake, because the dead trees were still standing. In the true hunter spirit, he regarded the awful catastrophe of 1811—12 as a blessing to the country, and expati- ited with delight on the vast area turned into lake and marsh, id the active trade carried on ever since in the furs of wild animals, j^had been the making of New Madrid, he affirmed, which would )me a rival of St. Louis, and exported even now at least half my peltries. There had been taken last year 50,000 racoon skin^and 25,000 musk-rats for making hats and caps ; 12,000 mink for trimming dresses; 1000 bears and 1000 otters; 2500 wild oats, 40 panthers, and 100 wolves. Beavers there were none, or only five or six had been trapped. He had gone in his canoe, which carried his hut, his gun, and his baggage, over the whole sunk country, and described to me the villages or hummocks built in the swamps by the musk-rats, which he called " French settlements," a piece of impertinence in which the Anglo- Americans indulge toward the Creoles of Louisiana. He told me that within the area of the sunk country in Arkansas, about eighty miles from New Madrid, is a space called Buffalo Island, containing about twenty-five square miles, where, two years ago (1844), a herd of buffaloes, 300 or 400 strong, was surprised, and six of them taken. 180 TRADITION OF EARTHQUAKES. [CHAP. XXXIII. The sunk country is not confined to the region west of the Mississippi ; for, on my way up the river, I learnt from Mr. Fletcher, a farmer, who had a wooding station in Tennessee, that several extensive forest tracts in that state were submerged during the shocks of 1811—12. and have ever since formed lakes arid swamps, among which are those called Obion and Reelfoot. He had observed, in several of these, that trees which had been killed, and had stood for a long time partially submerged, had in many places rotted down to the water's edge. In some swamps caused by the earthquake, they had all decayed to within a few inches of the base of the trunk. It is therefore evident, that should the turbid waters of the Mississippi overflow that region, and deposit their sediment on such stumps, they would present to the geologist a precise counterpart of the buried stools of trees with their roots before described as occurring at the bottom of the b]uff at Port Hudson.* Mr. Fletcher also told me, that he knew several fis sures in Tennessee, formed in 1811—12, where the ground on one side of the rent remained higher by two feet than that on the other side. I was informed at New Madrid that the Indians, before year 1811, had a tradition of a great earthquake which h previously devastated this same region. Yet there is so wide an area of forest without sink-holes, or any great inequalities of sur face, and without dead trees like those above alluded to, that wro can not suppose any convulsion of equal magnitude to have occurred for many centuries previous to 1811. Having explored the margin of the Great Prairie, and seen the sunk country several miles west of New Madrid, I returned by a different path through the woods, often losing my way, till I fell into the main road for the last six miles, which was cut straight through the forest, and was at this season singularly monotonous and dreary. It was furrowed with long, deep ruts, cut in black mud. and full of miry water. The sky was cloudy, and the plain as level as if it had never been disturbed by the slightest subterranean movement since it originated. The trees were, for the most part, leafless, and almost all of the same height, * Ante, pp. 137-140. CHAP. XXXIII.] ROUGH QUARTERS. 181 with no evergreens below them, and no grass ; but, instead of it, a somber brown covering of damp and dead oak leaves, strewed evenly over the ground. At one point I saw the rotting trunks of several fallen trees, and near them an old oak, on the boughs of which, near the base, a group of five turkey-buzzards were perched, in perfect character with the rest of the scene. Twilight was coming on, and the woods were silent ; but, as I approached the river, the silence was agreeably broken by the varied and liquid notes of a mocking-bird, and, at the same time, one of the large woodpeckers, with its brilliant plumage, flew over my head, as if to remind me that at other seasons the solitude is cheered by the song and bright colors of birds, when the leaves of the trees unfold themselves, and the sun's heat would then be so in tense, that a traveler would gladly retreat into the shades of the dense forest. When I took back my horse to its owner in New Madrid, I received a pressing invitation to exchange our present homely quarters for her comfortable house. Some of the other principal merchants made us hospitable offers of the same kind, which were exceedingly tempting. We thought it right, however, to decline them all, as we might have hurt the feelings of our German host and his wife, who, in their anxiety to accommodate us, had purchased several additional household articles. Among these was a table-cloth, and, when I entered the house, T was amused at the occupations of my wife and her companion. The baker's lady had accepted the offer of her guest to hem the new table-cloth, in which task she was busily engaged ; while the settler in the backwoods, having discovered that my wife had brought from New Orleans a worked collar of the latest Parisian fashion, had asked leave to copy it, and was intent on cutting out the shape, thus qualifying herself to outdo all the " fashionists" of the sunk country. A great spirit of equality was observable in the manners of the whites toward each other at New Madrid, yet with an absence of all vulgar familiarity. But what I saw and heard, convinced me that the condition of the negroes is least enviable in such out- of-the-way and half civilized districts, where there are many ad- 182 SLAVERY IN MISSOURI. [CHAP. XXXIII. venturers, and uneducated settlers, who have little control over their passions, and who, when they oppress their slaves, are not checked by public opinion, as in more advanced communities. New comers of a higher tone of sentiment are compelled some times to witness cruelties which fill them with indignation, heightened by the necessity of being silent, and keeping on good terms with persons of whose conduct they disapprove. To the passing stranger, they can enlarge on this source of annoyance, and send him away grieving that so late as the year 1821, Mis souri should have been added to the Union as a slave state, against the wishes of a respectable minority of its own inhabitants, and against the feeling of a majority of the more educated population of the north. CHAPTER XXXIV. Alluvial Formations of the Mississippi, ancient and modern. — Delta defined. — Great Extent of Wooded Swamps. — Deposits of pure Vegetable Mat ter. — Floors of Blue Clay with Cypress Roots. — Analogy to ancient Coal- measures. — Supposed " Epoch of existing Continents." — Depth of Fresh water Strata in Deltas. — Time required to bring down the Mud of the Mississippi. — New Experiments and Observations required. — Great Age of buried and living Cypress-trees. — Older and Newer Parts of Alluvial Plain. — Upraised Terraces of Natchez, &c., and the Ohio, the Monuments of an older Alluvial Formation. — Grand Oscillation of Level. — The ancient Valleys inhabited by Quadrupeds now extinct. — Land-shells not changed. — Probable Rate of Subsidence and Upheaval. — Relative Age of the an cient Alluvium of the Mississippi, and the Northern Drift. BEFORE leaving the valley of the Mississippi, I shall take this opportunity to offer some general remarks on the modern delta and alluvial plain of the great river, and on those fresh-water deposits before described in the bluffs of Port Hudson, Natchez, Vicksburg, and Memphis, which I regard as the monuments of a more an cient alluvial formation, one of high antiquity, yet formed when the physical geography of the country already bore a great re semblance to that now existing, and when, moreover, the land and waters were inhabited by the same species of terrestrial, fluviatile, and lacustrine mollusca, which now inhabit this region, although the land quadrupeds were almost entirely different. The delta of the Mississippi may be defined as that part of the great alluvial slope, which lies below, or to the south of the branching off of the highest arm, or that called the Atchafalaya. Above this point, which is the head of the delta, the Mississippi receives water from its various tributaries ; below, it gives out again, through numerous arms or channels, the waters which it conveys to the sea. The delta, so defined, is about 14,000 square miles in area, and elevated from a few inches to ten feet above the level of the sea The greater part of it protrudes into the Gulf of Mexico, beyond the general coast line. The level plain to the north, as far as Cape Girardeau, in Missouri, above 184 DELTA OF THE MISSISSIPPI. [CHAP. XXXIV. the junction of the Ohio, is of the same character, including, according to Mr. Forshey, an area of about 16,000 square miles, arid is, therefore, larger than the delta. It is very variable in width from east to west, being near its northern extremity, or at the mouth of the Ohio, 50 miles wide, at Memphis 30, at the mouth of the White River 80, and contracting again further south, as at Grand Gulf, to 33 miles. The delta and alluvial plain rise by so gradual a slope from the sea as to attain at the junction of the Ohio (a distance of 800 miles by the river) an elevation of only 200 feet above the Gulf of Mexico. First, in regard to the whole alluvial slope, whether above or below the present head of the delta, it will appear, from what has been already said, that sand is thrown down near the borders of the main river and its tributaries, arid fine mud at more distant points. The larger portion, however, of the whole area consists of swamps, supporting a luxuriant growth of timber, interspersed with lakes, most of which are deserted river bends. These lakes are slowly filling up, and every swamp is gradually becoming shallower, the substances accumulated in them being, for the most part, of vegetable origin, unmixed with earthy matter. It is only on their exterior margins (except after a sudden subsidence, daring an earthquake like that of 1811—12), that the waters of the Mississippi throw down sediment in the interior of any large swamp or lake, for the reeds, canes, and brushwood, through which the waters must first pass, cause them to flow slowly, and to part with all the matter previously held in mechanical suspension. Long before they reach the central parts of a morass or lake, they are well filtered, although still deeply stained by vegetable matter in a state of decomposition. Over a large portion of the submerged areas of the great plain, trees are seen growing every where in the water. Into the deeper water, where no forest can grow, the trunks of trees are floated, and many of these sink, when water-logged, to the bottom, which is also raised by an annual deposit of leaves, and of peaty matter derived from decaying plants, of which there is an exuberant growth round the borders of every swamp. That the admixture of inorganic matter is very small, has been shown by the observ- CHAP. XXXIV.] FLOORS OF BLUE CLAY. 18! ations of Messrs. Dickeson and Brown, who state, " that wher the woods are burning1, after an unusually dry season, pits ar% found burnt into the ground as far as the fire can descend Avithout coming into contact with water, and scarcely any residuum or earthy matter is left."* They also state that at the bottom of all the cypress swamps or brakes, there is found a peculiar layer of tenacious blue clay, which forms the foundation, or floor, on which the vegetable matter accumulates. We may conclude, therefore, that as the roots of the cypress penetrate far beneath the soil, and project horizontally far and wide, those of one tree interlacing with another, such root-bearing beds of argillaceous loam must be very analogous to what are called fire-clays, so well known to the geologist as occurring underneath almost every seam of coal in the ancient carboniferous rocks. f Other points of analogy might also be indicated between the deposits, whether of organic or inorganic matter, now accumulat ing in the valley-plain and delta of the Mississippi, and those of the ancient carboniferous rocks. When, for example, depressions are suddenly caused, as in the " sunk country" before described, certain wooded areas being submerged, the lower parts of the erect trees become enveloped with sand arid mud, the upper por tions rotting away, as must have happened in the case of the celebrated fossil forest of Dixon-fold, in Lancashire, belonging to the ancient coal-measures. $ In the modern alluvial plain, also, river-sand will be often thrown down, as the Mississippi shifts its course over spaces on which pure vegetable matter had been pre viously accumulating for hundreds or thousands of years, just as we find sandstone sometimes resting immediately upon the old coal-seams ; and, if there be a long succession of downward move ments, the thickness of strata, all formed in shallow water or in swamps, may be indefinitely great. Should the hilly country, moreover, be distant, pebbles will no more be seen in the modern * Silliman's Journal, Second Series, vol. v. p. 17, January, ] 848. t In my former "Travels," I have alluded to the fire-stones with Stig- maria (now acknowledged to be the root of Sigillaria), underlying the American coal-seams, as they do those of South Wales, 3000 miles distant. " Travels in North America," vol. i. p. 62. t Proceedings of Geol. Society, 1839. p. 139. 136 DEPTH OF FRESH- WATER STRATA. [CHAP. XXXIV. sand strewed over the buried trees and layers of vegetable mat ter, than they usually are in the grits associated with the coal of ancient date. The phenomena, also, of the New Madrid earth quake, may help us to explain the vast geographical area over which, in the course of ages, dense fluviatile and lacustrine strata, with intercalated beds of vegetable origin, may be made to ex tend without any inroads of the sea. For the inland parts of any hydrographical basin may be augmented indefinitely in length and breadth, while the seaward portions continue unaltered, as the delta around New Orleans, and the low lands bordering the Gulf of Mexico, preserved their level unchanged, while parts of Missouri and Tennessee were lowered. By duly appreciating the permanent geographical revolutions which would result from a succession of such earthquakes as that of 1811—12, in the territory of New Madrid, we shall be pre vented from embracing the theory implied in the language of those who talk of " the epoch of existing continents." In treat ing of deltas, they are in the habit of assuming that the present mass of alluvial matter which has been thrown into the sea at the mouths of great rivers, began to be deposited in all the great hydrographical basins of the world at one and the same fixed period — namely, when the formation of the existing continents was completed ; as if the relative levels of land and sea had, during that time, remained stationary, or had been affected to so inconsiderable an amount, as to be unimportant in their influence on the physical geography of each region, in comparison with the changes wrought by the rivers, in converting sea into land. But what we already know of the deltas of the Po, Indus, Ganges, and other rivers, leads to a very different conclusion. The bor ing of an artesian well at Calcutta, was carried to the depth of 481 feet, the greater part of the section being below the level of the sea, and yet all the beds pierced through were of fresh-water origin, without any intermixture of marine remains. At differ ent depths, even as far down as 380 feet, lacustrine shells, arid a stratum of decayed wood, with vegetable soil, which appears to have supported trees, was met with.* These appearances may * See " Principles of Geology," Seventh Edition, 1847, p. 266. CHAP. XXXIV.] AGE OF DELTA OF MISSISSIPPI. 187 readily be accounted for, by assuming that there was a gradual subsidence of the ground for ages, which was as constantly raised by the accession of fluviatile sediment, so as to prevent any in cursion of the sea. Occasionally there were pauses in the down ward movement, when trees grew on the soil, and vegetable mat ter of some thickness had time to accumulate. Recent observations, by Morlat and others, have demonstrated that, since the time of the Romans, there has been a general subsidence of the coast at the head of the Adriatic, to the amount of five feet, which has not prevented the delta of the Po and other rivers from advancing on the sea, although it must have checked their progress. Of the much greater movements of ele vation and depression which have taken place in the delta of the Indus, especially those wrought in the year 1819, I have else where given an account.^ It would, therefore, be perfectly con sistent with analogy to find, in the neighborhood of New Orleans, ancient swamp formations, with the roots and stumps of erect trees, unmixed with marine remains, far below the level of the sea, as is the fact, if I can rely on the information given me in 1846-f Finding it impossible to calculate the age of the delta, from the observed rate of the advance of the land on the Gulf in each century, I endeavored to approximate, by a different method, to a minimum of the time required for bringing down from the upper country that large quantity of earthy matter which is now depos ited within the area of the delta. Dr. Riddell communicated to me, at New Orleans, the result of a series of experiments which he had made, to ascertain the proportion of sediment contained in the waters of the Mississippi. He concluded that the mean an nual amount of solid matter was to the water as r.^5 in weight, or about ^ in volume. $ Since that period, he has made another series of experiments, and his tables show that the quan- * Principles, Seventh Edition, p. 437. t See ante, p. 109. J The calculations here given, were communicated to the British Asso ciation in a Lecture which I delivered at Southampton, in September, 1846. See "Athenaeum Journal," Sept. 26, 1846, and "Report of British Asso ciation," 1846, p. 117. 188 AGE OF DELTA OF MISSISSIPPI. [CHAP. XXXIV. tity of mud held in suspension, increases regularly with the in creased height arid velocity of the stream. On the whole, com paring the flood season with that of clearest water, his experi ments, continued down to 1849, give an average annual quantity of solid matter somewhat less than his first estimate, but riot va rying materially from it. From these observations, and those of Dr. Carpenter and Mr. Forshey (an eminent engineer, to whom I have before alluded), on the average width, depth, and velocity of the Mississippi, the mean annual discharge of water and sedi ment was deduced. I then assumed 528 feet, or the tenth of a mile, as the probable thickness of the deposit of mud and sand in the delta ; founding my conjecture chiefly on the depth of the Gulf of Mexico between the southern point of Florida and the Balizc, which equals, on an average, 100 fathoms, and partly on some borings, 600 feet deep, in the delta near Lake Pont- chartrain, north of New Orleans, in which the bottom of the alluvial matter is said not to have been reached. The area of the delta being about 13.600 square statute miles, and the quantity of solid matter annually brought down by the river 3,702.758,400 cubic feet, it must have taken 67,000 years for the formation of the whole ; and if the alluvial matter of the plain above be 264 feet deep, or half that of the delta, it must have required 33,500 more years for its accumulation, even if its area be estimated as only equal to that of the delta, whereas it is in fact larger. From information since received, I think it not improbable that the quantity of water may have been underrated in this estimate ;* and, if so, a larger amount of sediment would have * I allude chiefly to the observations and experiments, on the velocity of the Mississippi at various depths, made by Mr. W. H. Sidell. during a Gov ernment survey, communicated to me through the kindness of Mr. Ruggles, of New York, which, if correct, would lead to the inference that the average number of cubic feet of water discharged into the Gulf per second, is con siderably greater than Mr. Forshey and Dr. Carpenter deduced from their observations on the velocity of the stream at different depths. If, as I un derstand, there exist documents in the hydrographer's office at Washington, which would afford more ample data for such calculations, the Government would confer a boon on the scientific world by publishing them without CHAP. XXXIV.] AGE OF DELTA OF MISSISSIPPI. 189 been brought down from the interior in a given time, and conse quently a deduction would have to be made from the number of centuries above stated on that account. But, on the other hand, if it could be shown, by more accurate experiments and calcula tions, that the quantity of water in the above computation was greatly deficient, say even one-third less than the real quantity, I do not imagine that any exaggeration has been made in the time supposed to have elapsed since the rivers began to transport their earthy ingredients to the alluvial plains of Louisiana. The delta is, after all, a mere fragmentary portion of a larger body of mud, the finer particles of which never settle down near the mouths of the Mississippi, but are carried far out into the Gulf, and there dispersed. The description which I have given of the great distance to which the yellow and lighter streams of fresh water are seen extending, from the various mouths, in the flood-season, into the Gulf; and still more, the destruction of the banks and bars of mud and sand caused by the tide scouring out the channels when the river is low,^ and the strength of the marine current, run ning ten miles an hour, and the stories of anchors and heavy ballast cast up by the breakers high and dry on the shifting shoals near the extremity of the delta, make me doubt whether delay. Such experiments as Mr. Sidell's, which give the velocity at various depths and at different distances from the banks, are the more needed, because it seems doubtful whether any correct mathematical formulae have as yet been furnished for calculating the mean rate at which so deep a river as the Mississippi flows, from observations made simply on its superficial velocity. I placed all the data given me by Messrs. Riddell, Forshey, and Carpenter, in the hands of my friend, Mr. George Rennie, F.R.S., to whom we are indebted for many valuable papers on the application of the science of hydraulics to rivers (see Report of British Association, vol. iii. p. 415, 1834), and, after examining them, he came to conclusions which did not vary materially from those which I had previously announced. Mr. James Nicol, Assistant Secretary of the Geological Society of London, before he had seen Mr. Sidell's experiments, had expressed to me his belief that the quantity of water carried to the Gulf by the Mississippi, must be greater than I had assumed from Mr. Forshey's calculations, judging from the amount usually assigned as the annual discharge of rivers having hydro- graphical basins smaller than that of the Mississippi. * See ante, p. 121. 190 AGE OF DELTA OF MISSISSIPPI. [CHAP. XXXIV. the larger part of that impalpable mud, which constitutes the bulk of the solid matter carried into the sea by the Mississippi, is not lost altogether, so far as the progress of the delta is con cerned. So impalpable is the sediment, and so slowly does it sink, that a glass of water taken from the Mississippi, may remain motionless for three weeks, and yet all the earthy matter will not have reached the bottom. If particles so minute are carried by the current, setting for a great portion of the year from west to east, across the mouth of the river, into the Gulf Stream, and so into the Atlantic, they might easily travel to the banks of Newfoundland before sinking to the bottom ; and some of them, which left the head waters of the Missouri in the 49th degree of north latitude, may, after having gone southward to the Gulf, and then northward to the Great Banks, have found no resting-place before they had wandered for a distance as far as from the pole to the equator, and returned to the very latitude from which they set out. Were it not for the peculiar manner in which the Mississippi forms long bars of sand, which frequently unite with some part of the coast, so as to dam out the sea and form lagoons, the deposition of sediment in the delta would be much less considerable. A lagoon, like Lake Pontchartrain, once formed, becomes a receptacle of the finest mud, poured into it by an arm of the great river during the flood season, and the space thus parted off from the Gulf by bars of sand, is protected from the action of the breakers and marine currents. When I inquired what might be the depth of the fluviatile mud in the suburbs of New Orleans, I was told that, in making a railroad near Lake Pontchartrain, piles were driven down sixty feet into the soft mud or slush, and when a boring was made there, 600 feet deep, beds of gnathodon were found, but no marine shells. The depth of the alluvium may vary in different parts of the great sloping plain ; for certain areas, such as the " sunk coun try," for example, west of New Madrid, may have been repeat edly depressed, and have been always brought up again to the same superficial level, by the deposition of the river rnud, or the growth of vegetable matter. CHAP. XXXIV.] CYPRESS TREES. 191 The age of stumps and erect trunks of the deciduous cypress, whether living or buried, retaining their natural position, at points near the present termination of the delta, ought to be carefully examined, as they might afford evidence of the minimum of time which can be allowed for the gain of land on the sea. Some single trunks in Louisiana are said to contain from 800 to 2000 rings of annual growth, and Dr. M. W. Dickeson and Mr. A. Brown state, that the cypress brakes or basins, which fill up gradually, give place at length to other timber ; but before this happens, the buried cypress stumps often extend through a de posit of vegetable and sedimentary matter twenty-five feet thick. " Sections of such filled-up cypress basins, exposed by the changes in the position of the river, exhibit undisturbed, perfect, arid erect stumps, in a series of every elevation with respect to each other, extending from high-water mark down to at least twenty-five feet below, measuring out a time when not less than ten fully- matured cypress growths must have succeeded each other, the average of whose age could not have been less than 400 years, thus making an aggregate of 4000 years since the first cypress tree vegetated in the basin. * There are also instances where prostrate trunks, of huge dimensions, are found imbedded in the clay, immediately over which are erect stumps of trees, number ing no less than 800 concentric layers." Michaud, in his famous work on the forest trees of North America, mentions that stems of this deciduous cypress ( Taxodi- um distichum) are met with in Florida, and in southern Louisi ana, forty feet in circumference above the enlarged base, which is three or four times that size ; but such individuals dwindle to nothing before the gigantic trunk near Santa Maria del Tule, in the province of Oaxaca, in Mexico, which was first mentioned by Exeter, who found its circumference to be 117-10 French feet. Zuccarini, has lately removed the doubts of Do Candolle respect ing this measurement, which was taken above the dilated base, for that was no less than 200 feet in circumference. In this stem there would be 5352 rings of annual growth, if one line a year was taken as the average growth, the deposit of wood * Silliraan's Journal, Second Series, vol. v. p. 17. January, 1848. 192 ALLUVIAL PLAIN. [CHAP. XXXIV. becoming always much smaller in trees of great age ; but Zuc- carini, in his estimate, thinks it may be safer to assume 1-6 line as the average, which would even then give the age of 3512 years for this single tree. The great number of crescent-shaped lakes to the westward of the Mississippi, which formerly constituted bends in its ancient channel, are also monuments of the antiquity of the great plain over which the river has been wandering. Darby, the geogra pher, observed that, in the steep banks of the Atchafalaya, there are alternations of the bluish clay of the Mississippi arid of the red ocherous earth peculiar to Red River, proving that the waters of these two streams once occupied alternately consider able tracts below their present point of union. ^ Since their junction (an event, the date of which is unknown), the waters and sediment of the Red River and Mississippi have been thor oughly mixed up together, before any deposition of their mud takes place in the lower country. It is evident, therefore, that, when we are enabled, by geological observations such as those of Darby, to distinguish the older from the newer portions, even of the modem alluvial plain, we may obtain more aid in our chro nological computations founded on rings of growth in buried trees ; for we may then add the years deduced from stumps buried in the modern parts of the delta, to those proved by the structure of trees included in mud of earlier date. After considering the age and origin of the modem deposits of the Mississippi and its tributaries, we have still to carry back our thoughts to the era of the fresh-water strata seen in the bluffs which bound the great valley. These, in their southern termina tion, have evidently formed an ancient coast-line, beyond which the modern delta has been pushed forward into the sea. Let a, b (fig. 10) represent the alluvial plain of the Mississippi, bound ed on its eastern side at Vicksburg, as before described, by the bluffs d, at the foot of which are seen the Eocene strata, ft the upper part of the bluff being composed of shelly loam, or loess, of fresh- water origin, d, e (No. 2). At Memphis, Port Hudson, and many other places, loam of * Darby's Louisiana, p. 103. CHAP. XXXIV.] UPRAISED TERRACES. 1;»3 the same age as No. 2, rising from 50 to 200 feet above the level of the sea, constitutes the entire bluffs, forming a table-land like that represented at d, e. Similar deposits, #, c (fig. 10), recur in Louisiana, on the western side of the great valley ; but they are not, I am informed, denuded so as to present a steep bluff at a. They rest equally on Eocene strata, /(No. 3). From what has been said of the species of shells contained in the loam, d, e, at Natchez, and in other localities, from the remains also of associated terrestrial animals, and from the buried trees of Port Hudson, we have inferred that these deposits (No. 2), are the monuments of an ancient alluvial plain, of an age long anterior to that through which the Mississippi now Fig. 10. VALLEY OF THE MISSISSIPPI. Louisiana. c 1. Alluvium. 2. Loess. 3. /. Eocene. 4. Cretaceous. flows, which was inhabited by land and fresh-water mollusca agreeing with those now existing, and by quadrupeds now for the most part extinct. In my former " Travels in North America," I described some ancient terraces of gravel, sand, and loam, occurring every where in the valley of the Ohio, and gave a section of them as they are seen at Cincinnati.* I pointed out that the included fossil shells demonstrate the fluviatile and modem origin of the deposits, and suggested that their present position could only be explained by supposing, first, a gradual sinking down of the land after the original excavation of the valley, during which period the gravel and sand were thrown down, and then an upheaval of the same valley, when the river cut deep channels through the fresh-water beds.f Certain swamp formations observable in * Travels in North America, fig. 9, vol. ii. p. 59, chap. xvii. t The second terrace (c, fig. 9, ibid.) at Cincinnati, may imply a second oscillation. VOL II.. — I 194 EXTINCT QUADRUPEDS. [CHAP. XXXIV. the valleys of small tributaries of the Ohio, such as those of Big Bone Lick, in Kentucky, and Mill Creek, near Cincinnati, are of geological celebrity, in consequence of the great number of skeletons of extinct mammalia, such as the megalonyx, mastodon, elephant, and others, which seem to have lived, and have been mired in ancient morasses, before the land began to sink ; for the great mass of fluviatile loam and gravel forming the terraces, has been superimposed on the black bog earth containing such bones. The teeth, however, and bones of similar extinct quadrupeds, especially the mastodon, are occasionally met with scattered through the incumbent gravel and loam, so that the same assemblage of quadrupeds continued to inhabit the valleys while the first change of level or the subsidence was going on. By sim ply extending to the valley of the Mississippi, the theory before applied to that of the Ohio, we may, as already stated at p. 142, in reference to the Port Hudson bluffs, account for the geological appearances seen in the larger and more southern area. It has been long ascertained that in Norway and Sweden a gradual rise of the land above the sea has been going on for many centuries, producing an apparent fall in the waters of the adjoining ocean. The rate of elevation increases as we proceed northward from Gothenburg to the North Cape, the two extremi ties of this line being distant more than a thousand geographical miles from each other, and we know not how much farther north or south the motion may be prolonged under water. The rise of the land, which is more than five feet in a hundred years at the North Cape, gradually diminishes to a few inches in a century iu the neighborhood of Stockholm, to the south of which the upward movement ceases ; and in Scania, the southernmost part of Sweden, appears to give place to a slight movement in an opposite or downward direction.1* We also know that part of the west coast of Greenland, ex tending about 600 miles north and south, has been subsiding for three or four centuries, between latitudes 60° arid 69° N.f But whether, in this instance, the rate of depression varies in different parts of the sinking area, has not yet been determined. In spec- * Principles of Geology, 7th Ed. p. 506. t See " Principles," ibid. CHAP. XXXIV.] OSCILLATION OF LEVEL. 195 ulating, however, on the manner in which the valleys of the Mis sissippi and its tributaries may have been affected by subterranean movements, we are at least authorized by analogy to assume that the downward movement may have been greater in the more inland part of the continent, just as we have seen in 1811—12, that the " sunk country" west of New Madrid subsided, while the level of the delta at New Orleans underwent no sensible- change. If, then, the vertical movement in the interior, in and near the valley of the Ohio, for example, were greater than near the Gulf, as, if. in the former case, it were two and a half feet in a century, and near the sea only half that amount, it would fol low that the general fall of the rivers would be lessened. They would deposit all their heavier, and some even of their finer sedi ment, in their channels, instead of having power to carry it to the sea. They would fill up their beds, and often overflow the ad joining plains, raising their level by repeated layers of fluviatile matter or silt, frequently containing the shells of land and amphib ious mollusks. If, even now, the Mississippi, when flooded, dams up the mouths of its great tributaries, and transforms them for months into tem porary lakes, it must have produced the same effect to a far greater extent if at any time the general fall of the country toward the sea was less rapid. In narrow valleys bounded by ancient rocks 500 or 600 feet high, such as that of the Ohio, the alluvial formation could never acquire great breadth. Its thickness would depend entirely on the length of time throughout which the subsidence was prolong ed. But nearer the sea, where the continent falls with a gentle slope toward the Gulf, the encroachment of the fresh-water de posits (No. 2, fig. 11, p. 196), of the great river on the tertiary strata (No. 3), constituting the original bluffs on its eastern and western boundaries, might be very great. If we then suppose the downward movement to cease, and to be at length converted into an ascending one, the rate of up heaval being greatest in the more inland country, the fall of every river, and consequently its velocity, would begin immediately to augment. Their power of carrying earthy matter seaward, and s f ;. s « "~ e°£ | § V s-Mi * ^ £ S O S3 £ S 85* = Jl-^l 1 I dl I" a i: ^ *o s > s "5 a 5 S j^ •7 ~ - a CR « I r-3 '•-i Z | — 1 r S ^ £ >. ri « _£ 0 g OJ | ~ t -i 7^ s ,: 9) 1 1-measures of Alabama (Palaeo nite- CHAP. XXXIV.] OSCILLATION OF LEVEL. 197 of scouring1 out and deepening their channels, would be greater and greater, till at length, after a lapse of many thousand years, each of them would have eroded a deep channel or valley through the fluviatile formation previously accumulated. The surface of what was once the river-plain at the period of greatest depression, would remain fringing the valley sides as a terrace, apparently flat, but in reality sloping down with the general inclination of the valley. Every where this terrace would present clifis of gravel and sand facing the river. After these changes, the fundamental strata (Nos. 3,4, 5, fig. 1 1, p. 196) might be restored nearly to their ancient positions ; the fresh- water beds (No. 2) having been raised, and having suf fered great denudation. It is not improbable that the same series of movements gave rise to the accumulation and present position of marine strata of comparatively modern date, forming the lower terrace near Da- rien in Georgia*1 which is indicated at 2*, in the annexed section (fig. 11). The reader will remember that the remains of the megatherium, mastodon, elephant, Harlanus, equus, and other ex tinct species of land quadrupeds, are there associated with marine shells, of species agreeing with those now inhabiting the Atlantic. On the other hand, there are proofs in Texas of the prevalence of the same succession of subterranean movements far to the south west, along the country bordering the Gulf of Mexico ; for on the Brazos River there are beds of loam, or loess, examined by Dr. Dickeson, and, when at New Orleans, I saw the bones of extinct quadrupeds brought from that deposit. Among them was the jaAv-bone of a tapir, apparently identical with the South Ameri can species ; remains of the mastodon, elephant, ox, and other mammalia, much resembling, on the whole, those found at Nat chez and on the Ohio. As to the seaward extremity of the ancient delta, the effect of the gradual depression of land above assumed would be to cause its mud and sand to increase in thickness, instead of augmenting in area. When at length the movement was reversed, and the fresh- water deposits began to rise, the action of the sea would un- * See ante, vol. i. p. 257. 198 PROBABLE RATE OF SUBSIDENCE. [CHAP. XXXIV. dermine them, and, aided by the river and tides, sweep much of them away, and perhaps shape out a bay. But the swamp-mud, with innumerable interlaced roots of cypress and other trees, might offer considerable resistance ; and, after a time, the river charged with sediment would throw down bars, and form a breakwater, to protect the newly upraised deposits from annihilation. In regard to the time consumed in accomplishing the great oscillation of level which first depressed so large an area to the depth of 200 feet or more, and then restored it to its former po sition, it is impossible, in the present state of science, to form more than a conjecture as to the probable mean rate of movement. To suppose an average sinking and upheaval of two and a half feet in a century, might be sufficient, or would, perhaps, be too great, judging from the mean rate of change in Scandinavia, Greenland, the north of the Adriatic, and other regions. Even such an oscillation, if simultaneously continuous over the whole area, first in one direction, and then in another, and without any interruptions or minor oscillations, would require sixteen thousand years for its accomplishment. But the section at Cincinnati seems to imply two oscillations, and there would probably be pauses, and a stationary period, when the downward movement ceased, and was not yet changed into an upward one. Nor ought we to imagine that the whole space was always in motion at once. When we have at length done our best to trace back the his tory of the more modern and more ancient alluvial formations of the Mississippi, the question still remains, what may be their age relatively to the great body of the drift containing erratic blocks in the northern latitudes of this same continent. The terraces of gravel and loam bordering the Ohio, and those on a larger scale, but of the same age, which constitute many of the eastern bluffs of the Mississippi, are evidently features of subordinate im portance in the physical configuration of the continent. But to explain the origin of the northern drift of the Canadian lake dis trict, and of the St. Lawrence, as I have endeavored to show in my former " Travels," requires a reference to such changes as would imply the submergence of a great part of the continent CHAP. XXXIV.] NORTHERN DRIFT. 199 drained by the head waters of the Mississippi, Missouri, and their northern tributaries.* For this and other reasons, into which I can not now enter, I presume that the great mass of the most elevated drift in the north, and the glacial grooving and polishing of the rocks, although they belong to a very modern era in the earth's history, were nevertheless anterior in date to the loam of Natchez and Vicksburg. There exist in Canada, in the Niagara district, in New York, and other states north of the Ohio, lacustrine and swamp deposits of marl and bog-earth, including the bones of extinct quadrupeds, such as the mastodon, elephant, castoroides, and others, associated with land and fresh-water shells of recent species, which are decidedly post-glacial, and often found in hollows in the drift. These may be of contemporaneous date with the loam of Port Hudson and Natchez. The northern drift, however, is by no means all of the same age, and as the period of glaciers and icebergs freighted with erratics is still going on, and has now a wide range in the tem perate parts of the Atlantic, bordering the eastern shores of North America, so must we naturally suppose that certain parts of the drift, especially those found at lower levels, and near the sea, may not be more ancient than the loam of the western bluffs of the Mississippi. * See vol. i. ch. ii. p. 47, and vol. ii. ch. xix. p. 99. CHAPTER XXXV. Departure from New Madrid. — Night-watch for Steamers. — Scenery of the Ohio River. — Mount Vernon, Ornithology. — No Undergrowth in Woods. — Spring Flowers. — Visit to Dr. Dale Owen, New Harmony. — Fossil Forest of erect Trees in Coal-measures. — Movers migrating Westward. — Voyage to Louisville. — Professional Zeal of one of " the Pork Aristo cracy." — Fossil Coral-reef at the Falls of the Ohio, Louisville. — Fossil Zoophytes as perfect as recent Stone-corals. March 27, 1846.— -WE took up our quarters in the wharf- boat at New Madrid in readiness to sail by the first steamer bound for the Ohio, for I wished to visit New Harmony in In diana, and there was some risk of being detained several days. The first steamer we hailed, was bound for St. Louis, the next for the Cumberland river, Tennessee, and a third which might have taken us to Mount Vernon, in Indiana, where I meant to disembark, was unwilling to lose time by stopping, the captain shouting out that she was full of passengers, and heavily laden. Before retiring to rest, I engaged with the keeper of the boat that he should appoint a good night-watch, and an hour after dark, I was awakened by the loud puffing and splashing of a steamer, evidently close at hand. Going on deck, I found the faithless black sentinel fast asleep. It was already too late to hail the vessel, but we made out that she was the Nimrod, and I afterward learnt, that in the course of her voyage she was snagged, both her chimneys thrown down, and her boiler pierced, so that we had a narrow escape. I now gave the keeper of the wharf-boat to understand that the whole town of New Madrid should be informed next day in what manner their night-watches were kept, which piqued him, and he then lighted a large fire on the bank ; but having no longer any faith in the sentinel, I could not sleep, so I determined to keep a look-out myself. Fortunately another steamer soon appeared ; and, almost before she was fairly alongside, a party of active negroes leapt upon our deck, each CHAP. XXXV.] SCENERY ON THE OHIO. 201 snatching up an article of our luggage, while the clerk ushered us over the plank into a brilliantly lighted saloon. The change of scene to travelers who had been roughing it for several days under a humble roof, talking with trappers about the watery wil derness of the " sunk country," and who had just stepped out of a dark half-furnished wharf-boat, was more like the fiction of a fairy tale, than a real incident in an ordinary journey. Some musicians were playing at one end of the room, which was 150 feet long, and a gay young party from New Orleans were danc ing a quadrille. At the other end we were delighted to see a table covered with newspapers, for we were nearly a week in arrear of news, and their columns were filled with the recent de bates of the English House of Commons. There were also many articles reprinted from the best European periodicals, quarterly and monthly, besides those published in New England and New York. Nor were any of the advantages afforded by this floating palace more like an eastern tale of enchantment, than the thought, as we went to our berths, that before we rose next morning to breakfast we should be transported more than a hundred miles on our route northward against the current of a mighty river. March 29. — Passed Cairo in the night, and next morning were at Smithland on the Ohio, at the mouth of the Cumber land Hiver, having Kentucky on our right hand, and Illinois on the left. Limestone cliffs, bounding the valley, were a welcome sight, after the eye had been dwelling for so many weeks on flat and level regions. Although we had not yet ascended the river to a height of much more than 200 feet above the level of the sea, the climate had changed, and we were told that snow had fallen the day before. We observed that the red-bud, or Judas- tree, was not yet in flower. On reaching the mouth of the Wabash River, which divides Illi nois from Indiana, I learnt that when the ice breaks up there in the spring, it is often packed into such masses that, before melt ing, they float down with gravel frozen on to them as far as New Madrid. This fact may explain the coarseness of the materials observable in the shoals of the Mississippi, at low water, near Natchez, and still farther down ; and may perhaps throw light i* 202 ORNITHOLOGY. [CiiAP. XXXV. on some large boulders, of a former period, in the ancient gravel below the shelly loam of Natchez. At Mount Vernon we landed, and I collected there many fossil shells, of fresh-water and land species, from a terrace of yellow loam, elevated many yards above high- water mark, on the Ohio. Returning from my excursion, I fell in with a naturalist of the place, armed with a rifle, and carrying some wild birds which he had shot. He was a shoemaker by trade, and had a collection of more than 150 well-stuffed birds from the neighborhood. He told me that the notes I heard here in the woods were chiefly those of the red-bird, but that some of the most musical were the song of a brown thrush, called, in Indiana, the mocking bird, but differing from the real musician of that name, which, though abounding at New Madrid, does not range so far north as the Ohio. Conversing with him, I learnt that the loud tapping of the large red-headed woodpecker, so common a sound in the American forests, is not produced, as I had imagined, by the action of the beak perforating the bark or wood, but is merely a succession of sharp blows on the trunk of the tree, after which the bird is seen to listen attentively, to know if there are any insects within. Should they stir in their alarm, and betray the fact of their being "at home," the woodpecker begins immediately to excavate a hole in the rotten timber. I had promised to pay a visit to Dr. David Dale Owen, the state geologist of Indiana, and hired a carriage which conveyed us to New Harmony, situated on the Wabash River sixty miles above its junction with the Ohio. On our way across the coun try, we went through a continuous forest, consisting chiefly of oak, beech, and poplar, without any undergrowth, and in this respect differing remarkably from the wooded valleys and hills of the Alleghanies, and the region eastward of those mountains, as well as all parts of New England. Here there were no kalmias or azaleas, or sweet fern, or candleberry, or other evergreens. The green carpet beneath the trees was made up largely of mosses, and among them was that beautiful European species of feather-moss, Hypnum prolifcrum, in great plenty. The trunks of many trees were spotted by a jet-black fungus resem- CHAP. XXXV.] NEW HARMONY. 203 bling a lichen. Below the branches we were pleased to gather several spring flowers, the white anemone, the blood-root (San- guinaria canadensis), the dog-tooth violet (Erythronium ameri- canum), and the spring-beauty (Claytonia virginica). Though a large proportion of the mosses and other cryptogamia are identical with those of Europe, we saw no flower which was not peculiar to America. Many European plants, however, are making their way here, such as the wild camomile, and the thorn-apple (Datura Stramonium) ; and it is a curious fact, which I afterward learnt from Dr. Dale Owen, that when such foreigners are first naturalized they overrun the country with amazing rapidity, and are quite a nuisance. But they soon grow scarce, and after eight or ten years can hardly be met with. We spent several days very agreeably at New Harmony, where we were most hospitably welcomed by Dr. and Mrs. Dale Owen. The town is pleasantly situated in a valley watered by the Wabash, which here divides the states of Indiana and Illinois. Some large buildings, in the German style of architecture, stand conspicuous, and were erected by Rapp ; but the communities founded by him, and afterward by Robert Owen of Lanark, have disappeared, the principal edifice being now appropriated as a public museum, in which I found a good collection of geological specimens, both fossils and minerals, made during the state survey, and was glad to learn that the Legislature, with a view of en couraging science, has exempted this building from taxes. Lec tures on chemistry and geology are given here in the winter. Many families of superior intelligence, English, Swiss, and Ger man, have settled in the place, and there is a marked simplicity in their manner of living which reminded us of Germany. They are very sociable, and there were many private parties where there was music and dancing, and a public assembly once a week, to one of which we went, where quadrilles and waltzes were danced, the band consisting of amateur musicians. Say, the eminent conchologist, who died at the age of forty- five, formerly resided at New Harmony ; and recently Prince Maximilian, of Neuwied, and the naturalists who accompanied him, passed a winter here. We found also, among the residents, 204 FOSSIL, TREES, INDIANA. [CHAP. XXXV. a brother of Mr. Maclure, the geologist, who placed his excellent library and carriage at our disposal. He lends his books freely among the citizens, and they are much read. We were glad to hear many recent publications, some even of the most expensively illustrated works, discussed and criticised in society here. We were also charmed to meet with many children happy and merry, yet perfectly obedient ; and once more to see what, after the ex perience of the last two or three months, struck us as a singular phenomenon in the New World, a shy child ! I made some geological excursions with Dr. Owen and his friend, Mr. Bolton, to see the " carboniferous rocks," of which this region is constituted, and the shelly loam, like that of Natchez, which has evidently once filled up to a considerable height the valley of the Wabash, and through which the running waters have re-excavated the present valley. There is no church or place of public worship in New Harmony, a peculiarity which we never remarked in any town of half the size in the course of our tour in the United States. Being here on week-days only, I had no opportunity of observing whether on Sundays there are any meetings for social worship. I heard that when the people of Evansville once reproached the citizens of this place for having no churches, they observed that they had also no shops for the sale of spirituous liquors, which is still a character istic of New Harmony ; whereas Evansville, like most of the neighboring towns of Indiana, abounds in such incentives to in temperance. April 3. — Left New Harmony for Evansville, on the Ohio, Mr. Maclure having kindly lent us his carriage and horses. We were accompanied by Dr. Dale Owen and Mr. Bolton. On the way, we visited KimbalFs mill, in the township of Robinson, in Poser County, fourteen miles northwest of Evansville, where a fine example is seen of upright fossil trees belonging to a species of Sigillaria. These are imbedded in strata of argillaceous shale, or hardened mud, which constitute the upper part of the great Illinois coal-field, and above them lies a horizontal layer of sand stone, while a seam of coal, eighteen inches thick, is observed about eighteen feet below the roots. Having borrowed spades CHAP. XXXV.] MOVERS MIGRATING WESTWARD. 205 from the neighboring mill, we dug out the earth from round one of the buried trees, and exposed a trunk four feet eight inches high, from the bottom of which the roots were seen spreading out as in their natural position. There were two other fossil trees near it, both apparently belonging to the same species of SigiUaria. The bark, converted into coal, displayed the scars left by the attachment of the leaves, but no internal structure was preserved in the mud, now forming a cylindrical mass within the bark. The diameter of the three trunks was from 18 inches to two feet, and their roots were interlaced. A great number of others, found in like manner in an erect posture, have been removed in working the same quarry. The fossil plants obtained here and in other parts of the Indiana coal-field, are singularly like those in other carboniferous strata in Ohio, Pennsylvania, Nova Scotia, and Europe. Among them occur species of ferns of the genera Pecopteris and Cydopteris, and three plants, Neuropteris flexu- osa, N. cordata, and Lcpidodendron obovatum, all European species, and common to the Alleghanies and Nova Scotia. The three large fossil trees above described as newly exposed to view, were standing erect under the spreading roots of one living oak, and it is wonderful to reflect on the myriads of ages which have intervened between the period when the ancient plants last saw the light, and the era of this modern forest, the vegetation of which would scarcely afford, except in the case of the ferns, any generic resemblance, yet where the trees are similar in stature, upright attitude, and the general form of their roots. As we approached Evansville, we passed a German farm, where horses were employed to tread out the maize, and another where vines were cultivated on the side of a hill. At one turn of the road, in the midst of the wood, we met a man with a rifle, carrying in his hand an empty pail for giving water to his horse, and followed at a short distance by his wife, leading a steed, on which was a small sack. " It probably contains," said our com panions, " all their worldly goods ; they are movers, and have their faces turned westward, a small detachment of that great army of emigrants, which is steadily moving on every year toward the Pvocky Mountains. This young married couple may perhaps 206 VOYAGE TO LOUISVILLE. [CHAP. XXXV. go down to the Mississippi, and buy, for a few dollars, some acres of land, near a wooding station. The husband will fell timber, run up a log cabin, and receive ready money from the steamboats, which burn the wood. At the end of ten or fifteen years, by which time some of their children will have become profitable servants, they may have put by 2000 dollars, bought a farm, and be living in a frame-house." The very moment of our arrival at Evansville, a fine steam boat, the Sultana, came in sight, and we found, among the pas sengers, some agreeable acquaintances, whom we had known at New Orleans and Natchez. As some of these large vessels are much more expensive than others, Americans of the richer class, when making a long voyage, choose them purposely, as in England we take places in a first- class railway carriage, that they may be less thrown into contact with ruder travelers. One of our friends, a naval officer, speaking of the improvement of society in the western states, said that dueling and drinking had greatly diminished in the last fifteen years. He related one of the strange scenes he had witnessed at a dinner-party, only a few years ago, at the house of a judge, in a town on the banks of the Mississippi. A quarrel had arisen, when one of the guests took out a pen-knife, and stabbed the judge in the side, so that the blood spirted out. The judge himself immediately drew out a bowie knife, and his antagonist, at the same instant, a pistol, and it then appeared that every other individual was armed with knives or pistols. The narrator admitted, that as he was traveling, he had also pistols upon him. Fortunately some cool, judicious persons of the party interposed in time to prevent farther mischief. I fell into conversation with an intelligent well-dressed pas senger, who, as we sailed by the town of Utica, in Indiana, re marked that it was too near the large city of Louisville to thrive greatly ; and in speculating on the future prospects of the west, he said that by the census of 1840, it was proved that the At lantic states had about nine and a half millions of inhabitants, while the states lying west of the mountains, and^between the great lakes and the Gulf of Mexico, numbered about six millions CHAP. XXXV.] FORK MERCHANT. 207 four hundred thousand. Now it is believed that the census of 1850 will show the population of the whole country to have changed its center to the west of the mountains, and under a system of universal suffrage, the center of population becomes the center of political power. After having been much interested with the information which I gained from this companion, although occasionally struck with his violation of the rules of ordinary good manners, I was trying to divine to what class in society he might belong, when he began to enlarge on the number of hogs killed last year in Cincinnati, which exceeded all former seasons, amounting to 300,000, and to describe to me how the streets, in killing time, were blocked up with barrels of salt pork for ex portation, so that it was not easy to pass in a carriage. He then asked me abruptly, " How many hogs do you think I killed last season?" Imagining that he might be a farmer, I said, 300. He exclaimed, " 18,000, and all of them dispatched in thirty-five days !" He next began to boast that one of his men could evis cerate more hogs in one day than any other hand in Kentucky ; and, placing himself in the attitude of his favorite executioner, he gave me such a minute description of his mode of operating, and dwelt on it with so much zest, as to make me feel satisfied that, as Thomas Diafoirus, in the " Malade Imaginaire," proposed to treat his mistress with " a dissection," so this member of the " pork aristocracy" of the west, would never doubt that such feats of professional dexterity as he loved to dilate upon, must command the admiration of all men who have the slightest feeling for superior artistical skill. The distance from Evansville to Louisville was 205 miles, and on both sides of the river were hills of limestone or sandstone, of the coal formation, 300 feet high, frequently presenting steep and picturesque cliffs. Every where I observed a^flat terrace of loam, or loess, bordering the river, sometimes on the side of Ken tucky, sometimes on that of Indiana. I had found this ledge, both at Mount Vernon and at Evans ville, to contain land and fresh-water shells. At the last-men- tione dtown, where the terrace was from twenty to thirty feet high, one of the lower beds of coarse materials was full of PalndincB 208 FOSSIL CORAL REEF. [CHAP. XXXV. and the valves of a Unio, both of living species ; yet with them were included in the same gravelly and shelly mass, the well- preserved bones of the megalonyx. The coal-measures had given place to an older series of strata, the Devonian, when we reached the Falls of the Ohio, at Louis ville, where we saw the river foaming over its rocky bed. I first landed at New Albany, in Indiana, nearly opposite Louis ville, that I might visit Dr. Clapp, and see his splendid collection of fossil corals. He accompanied me to the bed of the river, where, although the water was not at its lowest, I saw a grand display of what may be termed an ancient coral reef, formed by zoophytes, which flourished in a sea of earlier date than the carboniferous period. The ledges of horizontal limestone, over which the water flows, belong to the old red sandstone, or De vonian group, and the softer parts of the stone have decomposed and wasted away, so that the harder calcareous corals stand out in relief. Many branches of these zoophytes project from their erect stems precisely as if they were living. Among other spe cies I observed large masses, not less than five feet in diameter, of Favosites gothlandica, with its beautiful honeycomb structure well displayed, and, by the side of it, the Favistella, combining a similar honeycombed form with the star of the Astrcea. There was also the cup-shaped Cyathophyllum, and the delicate net work of the Fcnestella, and that elegant and well-known Euro pean species of fossil, called "the chain coral," Catenipora cscha- roides, with a profusion of others, which it would be tedious to all but the geologist to enumerate. These coralline forms were mingled with the joints, sterns, and occasionally the heads, of lily encrinites. Although hundreds of fine specimens have been de tached from these rocks, to enrich the museums of Europe and America, another crop is constantly working its way out, under the action of the stream, and of the sun and rain, in the warm season when the channel is laid dry. The waters are now twenty feet above their lowest, and more than forty feet below their highest level, so that large spaces of bare rock are exposed to view. On one of the window-sills of Dr. Clapp's library was displayed CHAP. XXXV.] FOSSIL CORAL REEF. 209 a group of these ancient corals, and, in the other window, a set of recent corals from the West Indian seas, of the genera Mean- drina, Astrea, Madrepora, and others ; some of them as heavy and stony as those of older date, their pores, foramina, and minute microscopic structure, not being more distinctly preserved. No one but a zoologist would have been able to guess which set were of modern, and which of ancient origin. Yet so old are the fossils, that they are referable to an era antecedent to the Alleghanies, the Alps, and the Pyrenees, nay, even to the time when by far the greater part of the materials composing these mountain-chains were slowly elaborated beneath the ocean. CHAPTER XXXVI. Louisville. — Noble Site for a Commercial City. — Geology. — Medical Stu dents. — Academical Rotation in Office. — Episcopal Church. — Preaching against the Reformation. — Service in Black Methodist Church. — Im proved Condition of Negroes in Kentucky. — A colored Slave married as a free White. — Voyage to Cincinnati. — Naturalized English Artisan gambling. — Sources of Anti-British Antipathies. — Progress of Cincinnati. — Increase of German Settlers. — Democracy of Romanists. — Geology of Mill Creek. — Land Tortoises. — Observatory. — Cultivation of the Vine. — Sculpture by Hiram Powers. April 5, 1846. — FROM New Albany we. crossed the river to Louisville, the metropolis of Kentucky, and found the Gait House the best hotel we had been in since we left the St. Louis at New Orleans. On our way through the streets, we saw written in large letters, over a smith's shop, the word " black- smithy," and another inscription ran thus : — " Cash paid for coon, mink, wild-cat, beaver, musk-rat, otter, bear, wolf, arid deer- skins ;" which reminded us that this city, being the first place where large vessels coming up the river are stopped by the Falls, is the natural emporium for the produce of the western hunting grounds. A more noble site for a great commercial town can not be imagined ; and several merchants expressed to me their opinion, that Cincinnati, founded at a later date, would not have outstripped her rival in the race, so as to number now a population of nearly 100,000 souls, more than double that of Louisville, but for the existence of slavery, and a large negro population in Kentucky. Besides the disadvantages always arising from the partition of a country between two races, evils which emancipation can not put an end to, Kentucky suffers from the decided preference shown to the right bank of the river by the best class of new settlers from the northeastern states, who choose the free s-tate of Ohio for their residence, instead of the slave state on the left bank. CHAP. XXXVL] MEDICAL STUDENTS. 211 I made a geological excursion with Dr. Yandell, one of the Professors of the University of this place, into the neighborhood, going to the summit of a hill called Button-Mould Knob, so named from the joints of encrinites with which the lower strata of the carboniferous formation are charged. Here we enjoyed a wide prospect of the surrounding country, which,, if all the val leys were filled up, would form an even table-land, the nearly horizontal strata having been evidently planed off at a certain level by the denuding action of the sea. The valley of the Ohio forms the principal break in a region otherwise void of any strik ing feature in its natural scenery. A few spring flowers only were to be seen, the most plentiful being the Houstonia and the Claytonia. We went to an evening party at the house of one of the Pro fessors of the University, and met many of his colleagues, and some medical students. Two of the latter informed me, that they had been sent to London to finish their course of study, having been brought up to feel great respect and veneration for English educational establishments. They had been received kindly and politely by the professors, but the prejudices of the majority of their fellow pupils against the institutions of the United States, and still more their rude remarks about the vul garity of all Americans (of whom they knew scarcely any thing), had so wounded their national feelings, that they had written home to entreat their parents to allow them to attend classes at Paris, or in some German University, to which they had reluct antly assented. These young men, being of good families in Kentucky, were gentlemanlike in their manners, in this respect decidedly above the average standard of students of the same profession in England, and they spoke with no bitterness even on this annoying topic. Talking over academical matters, some elders of the company complained of the wish of the democratic party to apply their favorite dogma of " rotation in office," or, " le.t every man have his turn," not only to members of the executive and the election of judges, but actually to University professors. "You may amuse your countrymen," said they, "on your return, by telling them of the wisdom of our sovereign rulers, CHAPTER XXXVI. Louisville. — Noble Site for a Commercial City. — Geology. — Medical Stu dents. — Academical Rotation in Office. — Episcopal Church. — Preaching against the Reformation. — Service in Black Methodist Church. — Im proved Condition of Negroes in Kentucky. — A colored Slave married as a free White. — Voyage to Cincinnati. — Naturalized English Artisan gambling. — Sources of Anti-British Antipathies. — Progress of Cincinnati. — Increase of German Settlers. — Democracy of Romanists. — Geology of Mill Creek. — Land Tortoises. — Observatory. — Cultivation of the Vine. — Sculpture by Hiram Powers. April 5, 1846. — FROM New Albany we.crossed the river to Louisville, the metropolis of Kentucky, and found the Gait House the best hotel we had been in since we left the St. Louis at New Orleans. On our way through the streets, we saw written in large letters, over a smith's shop, the word " black- smithy," and another inscription ran thus : — " Cash paid for coon, mink, wild-cat, beaver, musk-rat, otter, bear, wolf, arid deer- skins ;" which reminded us that this city, being the first place where large vessels coming up the river are stopped by the Falls, is the natural emporium for the produce of the western hunting grounds. A more noble site for a great commercial town can not be imagined ; and several merchants expressed to me their opinion, that Cincinnati, founded at a later date, would not have outstripped her rival in the race, so as to number now a population of nearly 100,000 souls, more than double that of Louisville, but for the existence of slavery, and a large negro population in Kentucky. Besides the disadvantages always arising from the partition of a country between two races, evils which emancipation can not put an end to, Kentucky suffers from the decided preference shown to the right bank of the river by the best class of new settlers from the northeastern states, who choose the free state of Ohio for their residence, instead of the slave state on the left bank. CHAP. XXXVI. ] MEDICAL STUDENTS. 211 I made a geological excursion with Dr. Yandell, one of the Professors of the University of this place, into the neighborhood, going to the summit of a hill called Button-Mould Knob, so named from the joints of encrinites with which the lower strata of the carboniferous formation are charged. Here we enjoyed a wide prospect of the surrounding country, which,, if all the val leys were filled up, would form an even table-land, the nearly horizontal strata having been evidently planed off at a certain level by the denuding action of the sea. The valley of the Ohio forms the principal break in a region otherwise void of any strik ing feature in its natural scenery. A few spring flowers only were to be s-een, the most plentiful being the Houstonia and the Claytonia. We went to an evening party at the house of one of the Pro fessors of the University, and met many of his colleagues, and some medical students. Two of the latter informed me, that they had been sent to London to finish their course of study, having been brought up to feel great respect and veneration for English educational establishments. They had been received kindly and politely by the professors, but the prejudices of the majority of their fellow pupils against the institutions of the United States, and still more their rude remarks about the vul garity of all Americans (of whom they knew scarcely any thing), had so wounded their national feelings, that they had written home to entreat their parents to allow them to attend classes at Paris, or in some German University, to which they had reluct antly assented. These young men, being of good families in Kentucky, were gentlemanlike in their manners, in this respect decidedly above the average standard of students of the same profession in England, and they spoke with no bitterness even on this annoying topic. Talking over academical matters, some elders of the company complained of the wish of the democratic party to apply their favorite dogma of " rotation in office," or, " let every man have his turn," not only to members of the executive and the election of judges, but actually to University professors. "You may amuse your countrymen," said they, "on your return, by telling them of the wisdom of our sovereign rulers, 212 EPISCOPAL CHURCH. [CHAP. XXXVJ. who would shorten to a minimum the term of service even of men who fill literary or scientific chairs." I informed them that nearly the whole University lectures at Oxford and Cam bridge, had of late years, in opposition to earlier usage, been transferred to temporary occupants of tutorships, who looked for ward to the resigning of their academical functions as soon as they could afford to marry, or could obtain church preferment ; so that the extreme democracy of Kentucky would at least have no claim to originality, should they apply their maxim of rotation in office to a body of academical lecturers. On Sunday we attended service in an Episcopal church. The young preacher dwelt largely on the supreme authority of the Church, and lamented that many dogmas and pious usages, which had received the unbroken sanction of fifteen centuries, should have been presumptuously set at naught by the rebellious spirit of the sixteenth century, the great intellectual movement of which he described as marked by two characteristics, " non sense and philosophy ;" nor was it easy to discover which of these two influences, in their reference to matters ecclesiastical, were most evil in his sight. After a long dissertation in this strain, he called up to him a number of intelligent looking young girls to be catechized, and I never saw a set of children with more agreeable or animated countenances, or who displayed more of that modest reverence and entire, unreflecting trust in their teacher, which it is so pleasing to see in young pupils. That some of the questions should have reference to the doctrines just laid down in the preceding discourse was to be expected. One of the last interrogatories, " Who wrote the Prayer-book?" puz zled the whole class. After waiting in vain for an answer, the minister exclaimed, " Your mother ;" and made a short pause, during which I saw the girls exchange quick glances, and I found time to imagine that each might be exclaiming mentally to herself, " Can he mean my mother ?" when he added, in a solemn and emphatic tone, " Your mother, the Church !" Had his congregation belonged to any other than the Anglican Church, I might simply have felt regret and melancholy at much that I had witnessed ; as it was, I came out of the church in a state of CHAP. XXXVL] BLACK METHODIST CHUCRH. 213 no small indignation. I had heard, in the course of my travels, several discourses equally at variance with the spirit of the Reformation, but none before in which the Reformation itself was so openly denounced, and I could not help reflecting on the worldly wisdom of those who, wishing in the middle of the nine teenth century, to unprotestantize the members of a reformed church, begin their work at an age when the mind is yet un formed and plastic — dealing with the interior of the skull as certain Indian mothers dealt with its exterior, when they bound it between flat boards, and caused it to grow, not as nature intended, but into a shape which suited the fashion of their tribe. In the evening we were taken, at our request, to a black Methodist church, where our party were the only whites in a congregation of about 400. There was nothing offensive in the atmosphere of the place, and I learned, with pleasure, that this commodious building was erected and lighted with gas by the blacks themselves, aided by subscriptions from many whites of different sects. The preacher was a full black, spoke good En glish, and quoted Scripture well. Occasionally he laid down some mysterious and metaphysical points of doctrine with a dog matic air, and with a vehement confidence, which seemed to increase in proportion as the subjects transcended the human understand ing, at which moments he occasionally elicited from his sympa thizing hearers, especially from some of the women, exclama tions such as " That is true," and other signs of assent, but no loud cries and sobs, such as I had heard in a white Methodist church in Montgomery, Alabama. It appeared from his explan ation of " Whose superscription is this ?" that he supposed the piece of money to be a dollar note, to which Caesar had put his signature. He spoke of our ancestors in the garden of Eden in a manner that left no doubt of his agreeing with Dr. Prichard, that we all came from one pair — a theory to which, for my own part, I could never see any ethnological or physiological objection, provided time enough be allowed for the slow growth of races ; though I once heard Mr. A. W. Schlegel, at Bonn, pronounce it to be a heresy, especially in an Englishman who had read the " Paradise Lost." " I could have pardoned Prichard," said the 214 BLACK PREACHER. [CHAP. XXXVI. Professor, " for believing that Adam was the forefather of all the Africans, had he only conceded that « the fairest of her daughters, Eve,' never could have been a negress." Toward the close of the discourse, the minister said " that a protracted meeting would soon be held ; but such assemblies were, in his judgment, becoming too frequent." He also an nounced that on Easter Sunday there would be a love-feast, which no doubt would be very crowded, " and where I hope you will all enjoy yourselves." He then said, " Sirs and Madams, I have now to warn you of a serious matter, but I see many of you are nodding, and let every one wake up his neighbor. The sexton, poor man, has more than he can do." This official, by the way, had been administering with his cane many admonitory taps on the heads of the younger part of the congregation, such as must have precluded them from napping for some time, if their skulls are not harder than those of their white brethren. There was a general stir, and two fat negro women, between whom my wife was wedged in (for the two sexes sat on separate sides), looked to see if she was awake. " There is a storm brewing," said the preacher, "owing to some late doings in Ohio, and I hope that none of the membership will get themselves into a scrape." The exciting topic on which he then enlarged was the late seizure, or kidnaping, as it was termed, of Jerry Phin- ney, who, after residing some years in Ohio, had been reclaimed by the heirs of his owners, in consequence of some flaw in his letters of freedom, and brought back to Kentucky. An attempt at a rescue was for a time apprehended, but 500 dollars were soon raised and paid to secure his release. When I commended the action of the black preacher as grace ful, I was assured that he had successfully imitated an eminent American player who had lately performed at Louisville. « These blacks," said my informant, " are such inimitable mimics, that they will sometimes go through a whole sermon in the same style as they have heard delivered by a white man, only appear ing somewhat to caricature it, because they are more pompous and declamatory ; which in them is quite natural, for they are a more demonstrative race than we are. If he addresses them in CHAP. XXXVI.] NEGROES IN KENTUCKY. 215 a plain, colloquial manner, his sermon would seem tame, and make no impression. They can not talk about the price of a pair of shoes, or quid of tobacco, without such gesticulations that you would fancy it was a matter of life and death they were discussing." There was a second colored man in the pulpit, who delivered a prayer with a strong nasal twang, and very extravagant action. The hymns were some of them in rather a wild strain, but, on the whole, not unmusical. I learnt that the domestic servants of Louisville, who are chiefly of negro race, belong very commonly to a different church from their owners. During our short stay here, an instance came to my knowledge of ofmaster who, having an untractable black servant, appealed to a ne*gro minister, not of his own church, to interfere and reprove him for his bad conduct, a measure which completely succeeded. We were told of four Sunday schools for colored people in the city, and in one of them 170 children receive instruction. There are also other schools on week days for teaching negroes to read, both in Kentucky and Tennessee. When I communicated these facts to Americans in Philadelphia, they were inclined to be incredulous, and then said, " If such be the condition of negroes in Kentucky, they must be better off in slave states than in others called free ; but you must not forget that their most worthless runaways take refuge with us." A recent occurrence in Louisville places in a strong light the unnatural relation in which the two races now stand to each other. One of the citizens, a respectable tradesman, became attached to a young seamstress, who had been working at his mother's house, and married her, in the full belief that she was a white, and a free woman. He had lived happily with her for some time, when it was discovered that she was a negress and a slave, who had never been legally emancipated, so that the mar riage was void in law. Morally speaking, it was certainly not void ; yet a separation was thought so much a matter of course, that I heard the young man's generosity commended because he had purchased her freedom after the discovery, and given her the means of setting up as a dressmaker. No doubt the lady knew that she was not of pure blood, and we were told that only six 216 VOYAGE TO CINCINNATI. [CHAP. XXXVL years before she had run away from her owner. She had also concealed this fact from her lover, but at a time, probably, when her affections were deeply engaged. On the other hand, we may pity the husband who suddenly finds that he is disgraced by having made an unlawful marriage, that his children are illegit imate, and that the wife of his choice belongs to an inferior caste }n society. This incident is important in many points of view, and especially as proving to what an extent the amalgamation of the two races would take place, if it were not checked by artificial prejudices and the most jealous and severe enactments of law. I found that many here believe and hope that the time of emancipation is near at hand ; but I was sorry to discover that the most sagacious seemed to think that the blacks in these mid dle states will not be able to stand alone when no longer protected by enjoying the monopoly of the labor market. April 7. — Sailed in the Ben Franklin steamer from Louisville to Cincinnati, a distance by the river of 130 miles. The scenery much resembled that below the Falls ; the valley of the Ohio being bounded by flat-topped hills, 200 or 300 feet high, formed of hor izontal beds of sandstone or limestone, with steep slopes or cliffs toward the river, and at the base of these a flat terrace of gravel or loam on one or both sides of the Ohio, above high- water mark. We made twelve miles an hour against the stream, and if we were descending, the captain says, we should go at the rate of eighteen miles an hour. Among the passengers I saw a thin, sallow-faced, anxious looking artisan, whom I mistook for a na tive-born Yankee, holding forth to a small circle of idlers about " our revolution" and " our glorious victories over the British," and calling upon all to prove themselves "true Democrats." Soon after we started I saw him take a dram, and then sitting down to cards lose sixty dollars in half an hour. The officers of the ship, observing this transaction, interfered, and put a stop to the game, giving orders to the steward not to sell any more brandy to this passenger. I afterward learnt that he was an Englishman, a skillful, first-rate mechanic in the iron trade at Pittsburg, who had come out from Liverpool about sixteen years ago. After drinking and losing all his earnings at the gaming CHAP. XXXVI. ] ANTI-BRITISH ANTIPATHIES. i>\7 table, he has returned again and again to work, and can always command high wages. He has read up the history of the American revolution, and at an election can harangue a mob of newly come emigrants with great effect, and with all the author ity of a native, assuming a tone of intense nationality. On other occasions I had met with a naturalized Englishman of a different stamp, who might equally be described as "ipsis Americanis Ame- ricanior," one who, having been born in the middle classes, has gone over early in life to the New World, where he has succeeded in business, risen to a good social position, and given his children an excellent education. He then goes back to visit the " old country," and see his friends and relatives, and is surprised and mortified that they are separated by so great a gulf from the higher classes, greater than exists between the humblest and most elevated in his adopted country. He finds, also, the religious sect to which he and his kindred belong, only tolerated, and not standing on the same footing of "gentility" as the domi nant church. His sectarian zeal, his feelings of social pride, and his political principles are all up in arms, and he comes back to America far more patriotic and more of an optimist than any native. If he then ventures to enter on the political arena, his opponents warn the electors against one who is an alien by birth and feeling, and, in his efforts to disprove such imputations, he reaches the climax of anti-British antipathy. Such citizens were unaffectedly incapable of comprehending that I could have seen so much of the Union, and yet have JLO wish whatever to live there. Instead of asking, " Would you not like to settle here ?" it would be more prudent for them to shape their question thus : " If you were to be born over again, and take your chance, by lot, as to your station in society, what coun try would you prefer ?" Before choosing, I should then have to consider, that the chances are many thousands to one in favor of my belonging to the laboring class, and the land where they are best off, morally, physically, and intellectually, and where they are most progressive, would be the safest one to select. Such being the proposition, the Free States of the Union might well claim a preference, VOL. ii. — K 2lf! PROGRESS OF CINCINNATI. [CHAP. XXXVI. Every town we had visited in the last three months, since we left Savannah, in January, was new to us, and Cincinnati was the first place where we were able to compare the present state of things with that observed by us in the summer of 1842. In this short interval of four years, great improvements in the build ings, streets, and shops were visible ; a vast increase of population, and many additional churches, and new cotton factories. The soil of the country immediately behind the town is rich, and there is an ample supply of laborers, partly indeed because the Catholic priests strive to retain in the city all the German emigrants. Although they are industrious and thrifty, such an arrangement is by no means the best for promoting the progress of Ohio, or her metropolis ; for, next to having an "Irish quarter," a "Ger man quarter" in a large city is most undesirable. The priests, no doubt, judge rightly, both in reference to their notions of dis cipline, and with a view of maintaining their power ; for these peasants, when scattered over the country, and interspersed with Protestants, can not be made to confess regularly, attend mass, and read orthodox German newspapers, three of which are pub- blished here daily, and one weekly, all under ecclesiastical cen sorship. There are a large number of German Protestants, and 20.000 Catholics, in all twelve churches, where the service is performed in the German language. Only half of these are Romanist churches, but they are much more crowded than the others. The chief emigration has been from Bavaria, Baden, Swabia, Wirtemberg, and the Black Forest, and they are almost all imbued with extreme democratic notions, which the ordinary European training, or the working of semi-feudal institutions, evidently fosters in the minds of the million, far more than does the republicanism of the United States. The Romanist priests feel, or affect, sympathy with this political party, and in the last election they instructed the Germans and the Irish to vote for Polk against Clay. It ought, indeed, to serve as a warning, and afford serious matter of reflection to the republicans of America, that a church which requires the prostration of the intellect in matters of faith and discipline, and which is most ambitious of wordly power, is also of all others the most willing CHAP. XXXVI.J GEOLOGY OF MILL CREEK. 019 to co-operate with the ultra-democratic party. Are the priests conscious of having embarked in a common cause with the dema gogue, and that they must, like him, derive their influence from courting the passions, prejudices, and ignorance of the people ? If so, one method alone remains for combating both — the removal of ignorance by a well-organized government system of schools, neither under sectarian or ecclesiastical control, nor under the management of any one political party. In the city, the New Englanders appeared to me to have lost political weight since we were last here. To show me how seriously the priests interfere in their domestic affairs, a bookseller told me that he had just lost the services of a young shopman who, although a Protestant, like his father, found that his mother, a Catholic, considered it her duty never to let him rest till he adopted some other profession. The priest had told her that he was constantly handling dangerous and heretical books in his store, with which his mind must be contaminated. In many of the large towns, in the valley of the Mississippi, the Catholics have established such excellent schools, and enforced discipline so well, that the children of Protestants have been at tracted there, and many have become proselytes ; but I heard of still more Catholics who have become converts to Protestantism, and I can not but believe that Romanism itself will undergo many salutary modifications under the influence of the institutions of this country. I made an excursion with Messrs. Buchanan, James, Carley, Clark, and Anthony, to Mill Creek, a tributary valley of the Ohio, where loam and gravel, with fresh-water shells, overlies a deposit of leaves and fossil stems of trees. The shells are of recent species, and the layer of vegetable matter of the same age as that which contains the bones of the mastodon, elephant, megalonyx, and other extinct animals at Big Bone Lick, in Kentucky.* I afterward saw in the city some beautiful collections of Silurian fossils from the blue limestone, and was struck with the dimen sions of some of the trilobites of the genus Isoteles, the most * See ante, p. 194, and "Travels in North America," vol. ii. pp. 62, 65, 67. 222 SCULPTURE BY POWERS. [CHAP. XXXVI. their veins ; they confessed themselves unable to guess, for the two girls were not only among the best scholars, but better look ing and less dark than many of the other pupils. At Mr. Longworth's we saw a beautiful piece of sculpture, an ideal head called Ginevra, by Hiram Powers, who had sent it from Rome as a present to his first patron. It appeared to me worthy of the genius of the sculptor of " Eve" and the " Greek Slave." Thorwaldsen, when he saw Powers' " Eve," foretold that he would create an era in his art ; and not a few of the Italians now assign to him the first place in the " Naturalista" school, though assuredly there is much of the ideal also in his conceptions of the beautiful. It augurs well for the future culti vation of the fine arts in the United States, that the Americans are as proud of their countryman's success as he himself could desire. CHAPTER XXXVII. Cincinnati to Pittsburg. — Improved Machinery of Steamer. — Indian Mound. — Gravel Terraces. — Pittsburg Fire. — Journey to Greensburg. — Scenery like England. — Oregon War Question. — Fossil Foot-prints of Air-breath ing Reptile in Coal Strata. — Casts of Mud-cracks. — Foot-prints of Birds and Dogs sculptured by Indians. — Theories respecting the Geological Antiquity of highly organized Vertebrata. — Prejudices opposed to the Reception of Geological Truths. — Popular Education the only Means of pi-eventing a Collision of Opinion between the Multitude and the Learned. April 13, 1846. — FROM Cincinnati we embarked in the Clip per steamer for Pittsburg, a distance of no less than 450 miles ; so magnificent is the scale of the navigation of this mere tribu tary of the Mississippi ! Yet there are other large steamers also plying above Pittsburg, on the tributaries of the Ohio. We ob serve more punctuality than in 1842, in the starting of the steam ers. The Clipper made ten miles an hour against the current, including stoppages. We fell in with some large artificial rails of wood stretching more than half across the river, and met a steamer, which had run foul of one of them, still entangled, and, though bound for Pittsburg, floating down the stream with the raft. Our steamer only draws 3^ feet water, and her engines are of a very peculiar construction, hitherto used in sea-boats only, with the exception of one on Lake Erie. The inventor of this improvement is Thomas K. Litch. There are two cylinders, one twice the size of the other, and the steam escapes from the smaller into the larger, instead of issuing into the open air, so that its heat is not lost. The economy of fuel arising from this contriv ance is great, and the vibrations and noise much less than in other boats on the same high-pressure principle. In place of the usual bell, signals are made by a wild and harsh scream, pro duced by the escape of steam, as in locomotive engines ; a fear ful sound in the night, and which, it is to be hoped, some ma chinist who has an ear for music will find means to modulate. GRAVEL TERRACES. [CHAP. XXXVII. There was a Pennsylvania!! farmer on board who told me that, having a large family to provide for, he had resolved to settle in Indiana, and was returning from that state, after making a pur chase of land in "the rolling prairies." He had paid the usual government price of 11 dollar, or about 5s. Qd. an acre ; whereas he could sell his own property in Pennsylvania, which had a house on it, at the rate of 60 dollars an acre. He had been much con cerned at finding a strong war party in the west, who were eager to have a brush with the English. " It was a short-sighted policy," he remarked, " in your country, to exert so little energy and put forth so small a part of her strength in the last war with the United States. It will one day involve both you and us in serious mischief." At a point about twenty-four miles below Wheeling, we came to the largest of the Indian mounds on the Ohio, of which I have spoken in my former "Travels."^ It is between 60 and 70 feet high, rising from a flat terrace of loam, and a very striking object, reminding one, by its shape, of the pyramidal Teocallis of the ancient Mexicans, of which Humboldt has given figures, and which are so well described by Prescott, in his " History of Cor tes." As we approached Wheeling, the valley of the Ohio be came narrower, and the hills, composed of strata of the coal form ation, sensibly higher. The State of Ohio was on our left hand, or the northern bank of the river, and that of Virginia on our right. The flat terrace of loam and gravel, extending every where from the base of the hills to the river's bank, forms a pic turesque contrast to the steep slope of the boundary hills, clothed partly with ancient timber, and partly with a second growth of trees of less height, which has sprung up where clearings have been made. It is worthy of remark, that the materials of the great terrace of loam and gravel become more and more coarse as we approach nearer the mountains between Wheeling and Pittsburg, and at the same time the terrace itself is more and more elevated above the level of the river. It appeared to be about 60 feet high near the mouth of the Great Kanawha, and about 80 feet high at Georgetown, 40 miles below Pittsburg, * Vol. ii. p. 32. CHAP. XXXVII.] PITTSBURG FIRE. 225 which I can only explain by reference to the theory before ad vanced ;* namely, by supposing the amount of subsidence, as well as of the subsequent upward movement, to have been greater inland, or farther north, than in the south, or nearer the Gulf of Mexico. April 16. — There had been so hard a frost in the night, that the roof of our steamer's cabin was glazed with a thin sheet of ice as we approached Pittsburg, and we heard fears expressed that the fruit trees would be injured. Four years had elapsed since we were last at Pittsburg, and, in the interval, a consider able part of the city, covering sixty acres, had been burnt to the ground, the great roofed bridge over the Monongahela, all built of wood, having shared the same fate. A light suspension bridge has already replaced that structure of ponderous aspect, and al though the conflagration only happened in April of last year, new streets have sprung up every where from the ashes of the old, and the town has very far from a ruined or desolate look. Com manding the navigation of three great rivers, and an inexhausti ble supply of coal, it has every advantage save that of an atmo sphere free from coal smoke. I learnt that there had recently been a strike of the factory girls here for ten instead of twelve hours of daily labor. Their employers argue that they are competing with rivals who work their girls twelve or more hours per day, and the strike has fail ed ; yet many are of opinion, that even without legislative inter ference, a ten-hour rule will be eventually established. Most of our companions in the steamer were agents of com mercial houses going to look out for orders at Pittsburg. On the whole they were very intelligent, and conversed well on a variety of subjects, while most of them were too gentlemanlike to feel ashamed of " the shop." But we had now been living so many weeks in public with strangers, and without opportunities of choosing our society, that great was our delight to be able to hire at Pittsburg a private carriage, and set out alone on an expedi tion to Greensburg, 3 2 miles distant, where I had a point of geo logical interest to investigate. As we were leaving the hotel, a * See ante, p. 195, 226 JOURNEY TO GREENSBURG. [CHAP. XXXVII. news-boy, finding I was supplied with newspapers, offered to sell " me a cheap American reprint of the miscellaneous works of Lord Jeffrey, assuring me that " it contained all the best articles he had written in the Edinburg Review." To be once more climbing hills even of moderate height, was an agreeable novelty after dwelling so long on the flat plains of the Mississippi. We were on the direct road, leading across the Alleghanies to Harrisburg. The scenery often reminded us of England, for we were traveling on a macadamized road, and passing through turnpike gates, with meadows on one side, and often on the other large fields of young wheat, of an apple-green color, on which a flock of sheep, with their lambs, had been turned in to feed. The absence of stumps of trees in the fields was something new to us, as was the non-appearance for a whole day of any representative of the negro race. Here and there a snake-fence, and a tall strong stubble of maize, presented a point of contrast with an English landscape. In some of the water- meadows the common English marigold (Caltlia palustris) was in full flower. At one turn of the road, a party of men on foot came in sight, each with his rifle, and they were followed, at a short distance, by a wagon with women and children, and a train of others laden with baggage. Our driver remarked that they were " movers," and I asked him if he ever knew an instance of an American migrating eastward. He said that he was himself the only example he ever heard of; for he was from Kentucky, having come the year before to satisfy his curiosity with a sight of the great Pittsburg fire. There he found a great demand for work, and so was tempted to stay. Our road lay through East Liberty, Wilkinsburg, and Adams- burg. Some day-laborers, who were breaking stones on the road, told me they were receiving seventy-five cents, or three shillings, a day ; and this in a country where food and fuel are much cheaper than in England, although clothing is rather dearer. Near Turtle Creek, two farmers conducted me to a spot where coal was worked, and where the undulating ground consisted of sandstone, limestone, and shale, green and black, of the coal- formation, precisely resembling strata of the same age in England, CHAP. XXXVII.] SCARCITY OF SERVANTS. 227 both in mineral appearance, and in most of the species of imbed ded fossil plants. About fifteen miles before we reached Greensburg, we saw, in the extreme distance, the blue, faint, long, and unbroken line of the most western ridge of the Alleghanies. Greensburg is a neat, compact town of about 1000 inhabit ants. The houses are all of brick ; there is a court-house and five churches, some Lutheran, others Calvinistic, the German language being used in some, and the English in others. They publish three newspapers. We took up our quarters at a comfortable old- fashioned inn, where we were waited upon by the members of the family, for the difficulty of hiring or retaining servants here, seems to be extreme. One girl had left a lady, whose acquaint ance we made, because, being a farmer's daughter, she was not allowed to sit down at table with her mistress. The lady's sis ter, who was accomplished, and conversed with us on many lit erary subjects, was obliged to milk the cow for the whole sum mer, though they were in easy circumstances, such was the scarcity of " help/' Fortunately for us, my wife and I had, by this time, acquired the habit of waiting on ourselves in the inns, going occasionally down to the kitchen to ask for things, in a way which in England would be thought quite derogatory to one's dignity, especially in the eyes of the servants, whose trouble would thereby be lessened. Here, on the contrary, we found that it made us popular. The general system in America that servants at inns receive no gratuities, but are paid ample wages instead, is one cause of this difference. Yet much may be said in its favor, as it raises the independence of the servants, and relieves strangers from the perplexity of determining what fees are suit able. There was a crowded public meeting the day of our arrival, at which several orators were haranguing an audience of the lowest class, in favor of war with England about Oregon. The walls were placarded with bills, on which were printed, in large letters, these words, " Forty-Five, or Fight," which meant that the Oregon Territory must extend as far north as the 45th degree of latitude. 223 FOSSIL FOOT-PRINTS IN COAL STRATA. [CHAP. XXXVII. This ambition of the people of the west to possess Oregon, is at least no new idea, for I happened to purchase at Louisville an old guide-book, describing the Falls of the Ohio and the city, in which, when speaking of commercial matters, the colonization and annexation of Oregon was set forth as the means of "opening a direct trade with China." I observed to one of the citizens, that it was satisfactory to see that none of the upper, or even of the middle classes, were taking any part at Greensburg in this agitation. He shook his head, and said, " Very true ; but these meetings are most mischievous, for you must bear in mind, that your nobody in England is our everybody in America." I had determined to visit Greensburg, on my way from Pitts- burg to Philadelphia, that I might examine into the evidence of the reality of certain fossil foot-prints of a reptile said to have been found in strata of the ancient coal-formation, and of which Dr. King, of Greensburg, had published an account in 1844. The genuineness of these foot-marks was a point on which many doubts were still entertained, both in Europe and America, and I had been requested by several geological friends not to return without having made up my mind on a fact which, if confirmed, was of the highest theoretical importance. Up to this period, no unequivocal proofs had been detected of the fossil remains of vertebrated animals more highly organized than fishes, in strata of such antiquity as the carboniferous rocks, and the absence of air-breathing quadrupeds or birds, served to constitute negative evidence, of peculiar significance, in reference to the coal-meas ures, because, as before stated,1* they contained the monuments of shallow fresh-water swamps, and often of surfaces of land covered with a luxuriant vegetation of terrestrial plants, some of the buried trees of which still remain with their roots in their natural position. That we should never have found, in such deposits, the remains of air-breathing creatures, except a few insects, that we should not yet have met with a single mammifer or bird, or lizard, snake, or tortoise, or the faintest indication of their existence, seemed most inexplicable, and led many geolo gists to embrace the opinion, that no beings having a higher * See ante, p. 185. CHAP. XXXVII.] FOSSIL FOOT-PRINTS IN COAL STRATA. 229 organization than fishes, were created till after the carboniferous strata had been elaborated. During my stay in Westmoreland County, I was indebted to Dr. King for the most active assistance in the prosecution of my inqui ries. He kindly devoted several days to this object, and we first visited together a stone quarry in Union township, six miles southeast of Greensburg, on a farm belonging to Mr. Gallagher, where the foot-marks had been first observed, standing out in relief from the lower surface of slabs of sandstone, resting on thin layers of fine clay. These slabs were extracted for paving-stones, and the excavation was begun in the bank of a small stream, where there was at first a slight thickness only of shale overlying the harder beds ; but as they cut their way into the bank, the mass of shale became so dense as to oblige them to desist from the work. Between the slabs of stone, each a few inches thick, were thin parting layers of a fine unctuous clay, well fitted to receive and retain faithful impressions of the feet of animals. On the upper surface of each layer, Dr. King saw the foot-steps im pressed more or less distinctly ; but, as the clay was left exposed to the weather, it had crumbled to pieces before I examined it, and I had only an opportunity of seeing the casts of the same projecting in relief from the under sides of slabs of argillaceous sandstone. I brought away one of these masses, of which the annexed figure (fig. 12) is a faithful representation ; and it will be observed that it displays not only the marks of the foot-prints of an animal, but also casts of cracks, a, a', of various sizes, which must have existed in the clay. Such casts are produced by the drying and shrinking of mud, and they are usually detect ed in sandstones of all ages in which foot-marks appear. It will be seen that some of these cracks, as at b, c, traverse the foot prints, and they not unfrequently produce distortion in them, as might have been expected, for the mud must have been soft when the animal walked over it and left the impressions, where as, when it afterward dried up and shrank, it would become too hard to receive such indentations. I have alluded, in my former "Travels,"* to the recent foot-prints of birds called sand-pipers * Vol. ii. p. 168. 230 FOSSIL FOOT-PRINTS IN COAL STRATA. [CHAP. XXXVII. Fig. 12. Scale one-sixth the original. Slab of sandstone from the coal-measures of Pennsylvania, with foot- prints of air-breathing leptile and casts of cracks. CHAP. XXXVII.] FOSSIL FOOT-PRINTS IN COAL STRATA. 231 Fig. 13. Series of reptilian foot-prints in the coal-^trataTof Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania. a. Mark of nail ? 232 FOSSIL FOOT-PRINTS IN COAL STRATA. [CHAP. XXXVII. (Tringa mimtta), which I saw running, in 1842, over the red mud thrown down by every tide on the borders of estuaries con nected with the Bay of Fundy. When this mud, which extends over thousands of acres, has been baked by the hot summer sun of Nova Scotia, it shrinks and cracks to the depth of several inches or even feet, and acquires such consistency as to be divisi ble into the successive layers of which it is composed, presenting on many upper surfaces impressions of birds' feet and cracks, and on the under sides the casts of the same standing out in relief. ^ I have also stated f that on the sea beach near Savannah, in Georgia, I saw clouds of fine sand drifted by the wind, filling up the foot-prints of racoons and opossums, which a few hours before had passed along the shore, after the retreat of the tide. This process will account, in a satisfactory manner, for the sharpness of many fossil casts of animals in ancient rocks, as the grains of uniformly fine sand were poured into the newly made cavities, not by a current of water, which could scarcely have failed to disturb the soft mud, but by the air, which could not cause the slightest derangement of the most delicate imprints. No less than twenty-three foot-steps were observed by Dr. King on slabs in the stone quarry of Union township, before mentioned, before its abandonment, and the greater part of these were so arranged (see fig. 13) as to imply that they were the marks of the successive foot-steps of the same animal. Every where there was seen a double row of tracks, occurring in pairs, each pair consisting of a hind and fore foot, and each being at nearly equal distances from the next pair. The toes in each of these parallel rows turn the one set to the right, the other to the left. It is instructive to compare these impressions with those which had previously been met with in an ancient European rock (although one of less antiquity than the coal-formation), namely, the new red sandstone or Trias of Saxony and Cheshire. The accompanying figure (fig. 14) represents the Saxon Cheiro- * I have presented specimens of this red mud, with the foot-prints of birds, to the British Museum, Geological Society, and Museum of Eco nomic Geology. t Travels, vol. i. p. 167. CHAP. XXXVII.] FOSSIL FOOT-PRINTS IN COAL STRATA. 233 therium, so called by Professor Kaup, because the marks both of the fore and hind feet resemble the shape of a human hand. Now in these European hand-shaped foot-marks, both the hind and fore feet have each five toes, and the size of the hind foot is about five times as large as the fore foot ; but in the American fossil (fig. 13), the posterior foot-print is not nearly twice as large as the anterior, and the number of toes is unequal, being five in the hinder and four in the anterior foot. In the Greensburg animal, as in the European Cheirotherium, the fifth toe stands out near ly at a right angle with the foot, and somewhat resem bles the human thumb. On the external side of all the Pennsylvanian tracks, both the larger and smaller, there is a protuberance like the rudiment of another toe. The average length of the hind foot is five and a half inches, and of the fore foot four and a half. The fore and hind feet being in pairs, follow each other very closely, there being an interval of about one inch only between them. Between each pair the distance is six to eight inches, and between the two parallel lines of tracks there is about the same distance. In the case of the European Cheirotherium, whether English or German, the hind and fore feet occur in pairs, but they form only one row, as in fig. 14, in consequence of the animal having put its feet to the ground nearly under the middle of its body, and the thumb-like toes are seen to turn to the right and to the left in the alternate pairs. But in the American tracks, which form two parallel rows, all the thumb-like toes in one set turn to the right, and in the other set to the left. We may infer, therefore, that the American Cheirotherium belongs to a new genus of reptilian quadrupeds, wholly distinct from that which characterizes the triassic strata of Europe, and such a generic diversity might have been expected in reptilian fossils of such different ages. The geological position of the sandstone of Greensburg is per fectly clear, being situated in the midst of the Appalachian coal- 234 SCULPTURED FOOT-PRINTS. [CHAP. XXXVII. field, having the main bed of coal, called the Pittsburg seam, three yards thick, a hundred feet above it, worked in the neighborhood, and several other seams of coal at lower levels. The impressions of Lepidodendron, Sigillaria, Stigmaria, and other characteristic carboniferous plants, are found both above and below the level of the reptilian loot-steps. We may safely assume that the huge reptile which left these prints on the ancient sands of the coal-measures was an air- breather, for its weight would not have been sufficient under water to have made impressions so deep and distinct. The same conclusion is also borne out by the casts of the cracks above described, for they show that the clay had been exposed to the air and suri, so as to have dried and shrunk. As we so often see the ripple mark preserved in sandstones of all ages, and in none more frequently than in the American and European coal strata, we ought not to feel surprised that superficial markings, such as foot-prints, which are by no means more perishable or evanescent in their nature, should have been faithfully preserved down to our times, when once the materials had been hardened into stone. There are some bare ledges of rock, composed of pure white quartzose grit of the coal-measures, standing out exposed above the general level of the ground, in many places near Greensburg, especially near Derry, in Westmoreland County, about fourteen miles north of G-reensburg. They are so bare that scarcely any lichens grow upon them, and on some of them the foot-prints oi birds, as well as those of dogs and some other quadrupeds have been artificially cut. After examining them carefully, I entertain no doubt that they were sculptured by Indians, for there are many Indian graves near Deny, arid one of their paths, leading through the forest from the Alleghany Mountains to the west, lay precisely in the line of these curious carvings. The toe joints in the feet of the birds thus cut are well indicated, as might have been ex pected, for the aboriginal hunting tribes of North America were skillful in following the trail of all kinds of game, and are known to have carved in some places on rocks, many rude imitations of the external forms of animals. If, therefore, they were sometimes tempted to use the representation of foot-prints as symbols of the CHAP. XXXVII. ] OPPOSITION TO GEOLOGICAL TRUTHS. 235 birds or quadrupeds which they hunted, they would be not unlikely to give very accurate copies of markings with which they were so familiar. The important observations made by Dr. King relatively to the fossil imprints, called the attention of the whole country to the Indian antiquities of comparatively modern date ; but the popular notion that there was a connection between them is wholly erroneous. Since the announcement, by Dr. King, in 1844, of the proofs of the existence of reptiles at the period when the coal strata of Pennsylvania were formed, Professor Goldfuss, of Bonn, has pub lished the description of more than one saurian found in the an cient coal-measures of Saarbruck, near Treves. Never, certainly, in the history of science, were discoveries made more calculated to put us on our guard for the future against hasty generalizations founded on mere negative evidence. Geologists have been in the habit of taking for granted, that at epochs anterior to the coal there were no birds or air-breathing quadrupeds in existence ; and it seems still scarcely possible to dispel the hypothesis that the first creation of a particular class of beings coincides in date with our first knowledge of it in a fossil state, or the kindred dogma that the first appearance of life on the globe agrees, chronologically, with the present limits of our insight into the first creation of living beings, as deduced from organic remains. These limits have shifted, even in our own times, more than once, or have been greatly expanded, without dissipating the delusion, so intense is the curiosity of man to trace back the present system of things to a beginning. Rather than be disappointed, or entertain a doubt of his power to discern the shores of the vast ocean of past time, into which his glances are penetrating, like the telescope into the region of the remoter ne bulae, he can not refrain from pleasing his imagination with the idea that some fog-banks, resting on the bosom of the deep, are, in reality, the firm land for which his aching vision is on the stretch. I can not conclude these remarks on the geological discoveries made in these remote valleys of the Alleghanies, without alluding to a moral phenomenon, which was forcibly brought before my 236 OPPOSITION TO GEOLOGICAL TRUTHS. [CHAP. XXXVIL mind in the course of the investigation. The interest excited by these singular monuments of the olden times, naturally led to animated discussions, both in lecture-rooms and in the columns of the daily journals of Pennsylvania, during which the high antiquity of the earth, and the doctrine of former changes in the species of animals and plants inhabiting this planet before the creation of man, were assumed as established truths. But these views were so new and startling, and so opposed to popular pre possessions, that they drew down much obloquy upon their pro- mulgators, who incurred the censures not only of the multitude, but also of some of the Roman Catholic and Lutheran clergy. The social persecution was even carried so far as to injure pro fessionally the practice of some medical men, who had given publicity to the obnoxious doctrines. Several of the ministers of the Lutheran church, who had studied for years in German universities, were too well informed not to believe in the conclu sions established by geologists, respecting the immensity of past time and former vicissitudes, both in animal and vegetable life : but although taking a lively interest in discoveries made at their own door, and joining in the investigations, they were compelled by prudence to conceal their opinions from their congregations, or they would have lost all influence over them, and might perhaps have seen their churches deserted. Yet by maintaining silence in deference to the opinions of the more ignorant, they become, in some degree, the instruments of countenancing error ; nay, they are rearing up the rising generation to be, in their turn, the per secutors of many of their contemporaries, who may hereafter be far in advance in their scientific knowledge. " To nothing but error," says a popular writer of our times, " can any truth be dangerous ; and I know not," he exclaims, " where else there is seen so altogether tragical a spectacle, as that religion should be found standing in the highways, to say, < Let no man learn the simplest laws of the universe, lest they mislearn the highest. In the name of God the Maker, who said, and hourly yet says, Let there lie light, we command that you continue in darkness !' "* * Letter on Secular Education, by T. Carlyle, July, 1848. CHAP. XXXVII.] INTELLECTUAL FREEDOM. Goldsmith, in the " Vicar of Wakefield," makes his traveler say, that after he had walked through Europe, and examined mankind nearly, he found that it is not the forms of government, whether they be monarchies or commonwealths, that determine the amount of liberty enjoyed by individuals, but that " riches in general are in every country another name for freedom." I agree with Goldsmith that the forms of government are not alone suffi cient to secure freedom — they are but means to an end. Here we have in Pennsylvania a free press, a widely extended suffrage, and the most perfect religious toleration — nay, more than tolera tion, all the various sects enjoying political equality, and, what is more rare, an equality of social rank , yet all this machinery is not capable, as we have seen, of securing even so much of intel lectual freedom as shall enable a student of nature to discuss freely the philosophical questions which the progress of science brings naturally before him. He can not even announce with impunity, results which half a century of observation and reason ing has confirmed by evidence little short of mathematical demon stration. But can riches, as Goldsmith suggests, secure intellectual liberty ? No doubt they can protect the few who possess them from pecuniary penalties, when they profess unpopular doctrines. But to enable a man to think, he must be allowed to communi cate freely his thoughts to others. Until they have been brought into the daylight and discussed, they will never be clear even to himself. They must be warmed by the sympathy of kindred minds, and stimulated by the heat of controversy, or they will never be fully developed and made to ripen and fructify. How, then, can we obtain this liberty ? There is only one method ; it is by educating the millions, and by dispelling their ignorance, prejudices, and bigotry. Let Pennsylvania not only establish numerous free schools, but let her, when she organizes a system of government instruction, raise the qualifications, pay, and station in society of the secular teachers, as highly as Massachusetts is now aspiring to do, and the persecution I have complained of will cease at once and for ever. The project of so instructing the millions might well indeed be 238 POPULAR EDUCATION. [CHAP, XXXVII. deemed Utopian, if it were necessary that all should understand the patient and laborious trains of research and reasoning by which we have arrived at grand generalizations in geology, and other branches of physical science. But this is not requisite for the desired end. We have simply to communicate the results, and this we are bound to do, without waiting till they have been established for half a century. We ought rather carefully to prepare the public mind for new conclusions as soon as they become highly probable, and thus make impossible that collision of opinion, so much to be deprecated, between the multitude and the learned. It is as easy to teach a peasant or a child that the earth moves round the sun, as to inculcate the old exploded dogma that it is the motionless center of the universe. The child is as willing to believe that our planet is of indefinite antiquity, as that it is only 6000 years old. Tell him that the earth was inhabited by other races of animals and plants before the creation of man, as we now know it to have been, and the idea is not more difficult for him to conceive than the notion which is usually allowed to take root in his mind, that man and the species of animals and plants, now our contemporaries, were the first occupants of this globe. All that we require, when once a good system of primary and normal schools has been organized, is a moderate share of moral courage and love of truth, on the part of the laity and clergy ; and then the academical chair and scientific lecture-room, and every pulpit, and every village school, may be made to speak the same lan guage, in regard to those natural phenomena, which are of a kind to strike and interest the popular mind.* * The substance of the above remarks, on the fossil foot-prints of Greens- burg, was given by me in a Lecture to the Royal Institution, London, Feb. 4, 1848. / V Jsfff'j • CHAPTER XXXVIII. Greensburg to Philadelphia. — Crossing the Alleghany Mountains. — Scenery. — Absence of Lakes. — Harrisburg. — African Slave-trade. — Railway Meeting at Philadelphia. — Borrowing Money for Public Works. — Negro Episcopal Clergyman. — Washington. — National Fair and Protectionist Doctrines. — Dog-wood in Virginia. — Excursion with Dr. Wyman. — Nat ural History. — Musk-rats. — Migration of Humming-birds to New Jersey. April 19, 1846. — LEFT Greensburg, intending to cross the Alleghariy Mountains to Harrisburg, and go thence to Philadel phia. We started in the evening in a large stage coach, in which were nine inside passengers, so that our night journey through Youngstown, Stony town, and Shellsburg was fatiguing, and not the less so by our having twice to turn out in the dark, while all the luggage was shifted to a new vehicle. The last of these broke down, one of the wheels having given way, and we had an opportunity of witnessing the resources and ingenuity displayed on such occasions by American travelers. A large bough of a tree was cut off with an ax, and tied on to the axletree with ropes, so as to support the body of the carriage, and in this way we went several miles without inconvenience. During one of the night transfers of our luggage a carpet bag of mine was left be hind, and when I afterward missed it at Philadelphia I wrote to three places to claim it. After five days I found it in my room in the hotel, no one knowing whence it came, and nothing having been paid for it. Before reaching1 Philadelphia it must have been transferred to three distinct conveyances, including two railways. I may state here a fact highly creditable to the public convey ances in the United States, that I never lost a package in either of my tours, although I sent more than thirty boxes of geological specimens from various places, often far south of the Potomac, and west of the Alleghanies ; some by canals, some by river steamers, others by coaches or railways. Every one of them sooner or later found their way safely to my house in London. 240 ABSENCE OF LAKES. [CHAP. XXXV11I. On leaving Greensburg we crossed one after another of the long parallel ridges of which the Alleghany chain is composed, de scending into each of the long intervening valleys, the hills be coming higher and higher as we advanced eastward. The char acter of the forest changed as we came to higher ground, espe cially by the intermixture of trees of the fir tribe, and by the undergrowth of azaleas, kalmias, and rhododendrons, for I had seen none of these evergreens since I left Indiana, not even under the oak wood round Greensburg. When day dawned we had reached the highest part of our road, and enjoyed a splendid mountain view, the steep wooded slopes being relieved by the contrast of green meadows bordering the rivers in the bottom of each deep valley, while in many parts of the landscape a pictur esque effect was produced by what appeared to be extensive lakes. All who were strangers to the scene required to be assured that they were not really sheets of water ; yet they were simply banks of dense white fog resting on the low grounds, which the heat of the sun would soon dissipate. It is singular that there are no lakes in the Appalachian chain, all the rivers escaping from the longitudinal valleys through gorges or cross fissures, which seem invariably to accompany such long flexures of the strata as char acterize the Alleghanies or the Jura. In Campbell's " Gertrude of Wyoming," indeed, we see — "Lake after lake interminably gleam," amidst the Appalachian ridges ; but such characteristics of the scenery of this chain are as pure inventions of the poet's imagina tion, as the flamingoes, palrns, and aloes with which he adorns the banks of the Susquehanna. Near the highest summit of the chain I saw two seams of ex cellent coal, one of them twelve feet thick, in strata belonging to the same series which I had examined near Greensburg. After descending from the highest level, we followed for a time the windings of the Juniata River, the road often bounded by high rocky cliffs, on the ledges of which we saw the scarlet columbine, blue hepatica, and other wild flowers in blossom. We slept at Chambersburg, where, on the roof of the court- CHAP. XXXVIII.] AFRICAN SLAVE-TRADE. 241 house, stands a statue of Franklin, holding a lightning conductor in his hand. A company of firemen were exercising their en gines in the great square, throwing up powerful jets of water high enough to wash the statue. From Chambersburg we went on by railway at the rate of fourteen miles an hour, only slackening our pace when we passed through the middle of towns, such as Shippensburg and Carlisle, where we had the amusement of looking from the cars into the shop windows. On reaching the Susquehanna we came in sight of Harrisburg, the seat of Legislature of Pennsylvania, a cheerful town, which makes a handsome appearance at a distance, with its numerous spires and domes. The railway bridge over the river had been, burnt down, and the old bridge carried away by a recent freshet, when large fragments of ice were borne down against the piers. Among the passengers in the railway to Philadelphia, was an American naval officer, who had just returned from service on the coast of Africa, fully persuaded that the efforts made by the English and United States fleets to put down the slave-trade, had increased the misery and loss of life of the negroes, without tending to check the traffic, which might, he thought, have been nearly put an end to before now, if England and other countries had spent an equally enormous sum of money in forming settle ments such as Liberia ; although he admitted that negroes from the United States, whose families had been acclimatized in Amer ica for several generations, and who settled in Liberia, were cut off by fever almost as rapidly as Europeans. Returning to Philadelphia, after an absence of six months, we were as much pleased as ever with the air of refinement of the principal streets, and the well-dressed people walking on the neat pavements, under the shade of a double row of green trees, or gazing, in a bright, clear atmosphere, at the tastefully arranged shop windows ; nor could we agree with those critics who com plain of the prim and quakerish air, and the monotonous same ness, of so regularly built a city. During our stay, a large meeting was held to promote a scheme for a new railway to Pittsburg, through Harrisburg, the interest VOL. II. L 242 NEGRO CLERGYMAN. [CHAP. XXXVIII. of the money to be raised chiefly by city rates. Some of rny friends here are opposed to the measure, declaring that such pub lic works are never executed with economy, nor thriftily man aged. The taxation always falls on some districts, which derive no profit from the enterprise, and they demand other grants of public money as a compensation, and these are laid out with equal extravagance. The good sense of the New Englanders, say they, has almost invariably checked them from entering upon such un dertakings, and in one of the few instances in which they have deviated from sound policy, they have repented. For when, in opposition to the richer inhabitants, a branch railway was made to connect Bridgeport, in Connecticut, with the main line of road, the bonds of that small inland town were pledged as security for the money borrowed. The traffic proved insufficient to meet their liabilities, and a majority of the citizens then determined to repudiate. The rich alleged that they had opposed the project, and the poor, who had voted away their money, were quite will ing that no new taxes should be imposed. The creditors, how ever, went to law, and, by aid of the courts, compelled payment, as the Supreme Court might have done in the case of the delin quent states (had not the original constitution of the Union been altered before any of them repudiated), which might have given a wholesome check to rash enterprises guaranteed by state bonds. The booksellers tell me that their trade is injured by the war- panic, arid I observe that most of the halfpenny, or cent papers, are still very belligerent on the Oregon question. On Sunday, I attended service, for the first time, in a free black Episcopal church. Prayers were read well by a negro clergyman, who was evidently an educated man. The congre gation consisted wholly of the colored race. Where there is a liturgy, and where written sermons are read, there is small oppor tunity of comparing the relative capabilities of Africans and Euro peans for the discharge of such functions. In the Baptist, Meth odist, and Presbyterian services, the success of the minister depends much more on his individual ability. I was glad, however, to see a negro officiating in a church which confers so much social rank on its clergyman, and in no city more than Philadelphia CHAP. XXXVIII.] WASHINGTON— FREE TRADE. 243 does the colored race stand in need of some such make- weights to neutralize the prejudices which retard their natural progress. We were told of an ineffectual attempt, recently made by a lady here, to obtain leave to bury a favorite free negro woman in St. James's graveyard, although she had died a member of the Epis copal church ; nor are any colored people allowed to be buried at the Laurel Hill Cemetery. That burial-ground commands a beautiful view up and down the Schuylkill, and the ground there is laid out with much taste, being covered with evergreens and trees, and having many of the graves adorned, at this season, with violets and lilies of the valley. April 27. — Leaving my wife with some friends at Philadel phia, I set out on a geological tour to Richmond, Virginia, to Re sume my examination of the Oolitic coal-field, left half-finished in December last. At Washington I found they were holding a national fair, or grand exhibition of manufactured articles, intend ed to convince Congress of the advantage of a high tariff. The protectionists maintain that every article which, for seven years, has been shielded from foreign competition, has been reduced in price to the consumer below the foreign cost at the time when the duty was imposed. The free-traders, on the other hand, argue, that their antagonists keep out of sight the fact that in those same seven years the price of the foreign articles might, and probably would, have fallen as much. One party points to the former policy of Great Britain toward her American colonies ; how she interdicted them from manufacturing for themselves, and even from selling the productions of their own soil and industry to any but the mother country ; — how she grew rich by monop oly and restrictions, nursing her infant agriculture, commerce, and factories, by prohibitive duties ; and they ask whether, if the English cabinet really believed in the theory of free-trade, they would not long ere this have repealed the navigation laws ? The advocates of the opposite policy appeal to the recent law for ad mitting American corn duty-free into England, as demonstrating the sincerity of the British government. But in this controversy it happens, as usual, that class-interests are espoused with all the personal zeal and energy with which men pursue a private object, 244 TREES AND FLOWERS. [CHAP. XXXVIII. while the cause of science, and the general good of the public, being every body's business, are treated with comparative apathy. When I arrived in Virginia, April 29th, I found the woods every where enlivened by the dazzling white flowers, or bracteae, of the dog- wood (Cornus florida), the average height of wliich somewhat exceeds that of our white thorn ; and when, as often happens, there is a back-ground of cedar or pine, the mass of flower is almost as conspicuous as if a shower of snow had fallen upon the boughs. As we sometimes see a pink variety of the wild thorn in England, so there occurs here, now and then, though rarely, a pink dog- wood. Having never remarked this splendid tree in any English shrubbery or park, I had some fine young plants sent home from a nursery to several English friends, and, among others, to Sir William Hooker, at Kew, who was not a little diverted at my zeal for the introduction ef a tree which had been well-established for many years in the British arboretum. But now that I have since seen the dwarfed and shabby repre sentatives of this species in our British shrubberies, I am ready to maintain that it is still unknown in our island. No Virginian, who was not a botanist, could ever recognize it in England as the same plant as the dog- wood of his native land. Yet it is capable of enduring frosts as severe and protracted as are ever experienced in the south of England, and the cause of its flowers not attain ing their full size in our climate, is probably a want of sufficient intensity of light and heat. A great variety of oaks were now in leaf in the Virginian forests, among which I observed the white oak, with its leaves in the shape of a violin, and the willow oak, with long and nar row leaves. The ground underneath these trees was adorned with the pink azalea and many other flowers, among the rest the white violet, a species of phlox, and an everlasting Gnaplialium. The cedar (Juniperus virginiana) is often covered at this season with what is termed here the cedar apple (Podisoma macropus), supposed by many of the inhabitants to be the flower or fruit of the tree itself. It is a beautiful orange-colored fungus, ornamented with tassels, a very conspicuous object after a shower, but shrinking up if exposed to a day's sunshine. CHAP. XXXVIII.] NATURAL HISTORY. 245 I made excursions in various directions with my friend Mr. GifFord, to examine the coal mines north and south of Black- heath, near Richmond, and have already given the results of our observations in the first volume.^ I afterward made an expedi tion with Dr. Wyman, now Professor of Comparative Anatomy at Cambridge, Massachussetts, to examine the geology of the tertiary strata round Richmond, and those (of the Eocene period) displayed in the cliffs bordering the Potomac River, near Acquia. Creek. In one of our walks we saw some dogs feeding on part of the carcass of a horse, and a group of turkey-buzzards eagerly looking on close at hand, but not daring to share in the repast. Near the same spot were the skulls of two dogs lying bleached in the sun, and in the hollow of each we found the nest of a large species of wasp, somewhat resembling our hornet, contain ing a good store of honey. On the surface of some pools of water I saw floating the singular seed-vessel of the nuphar, or yellow pond lily (Nelumbiuni). These seeds have been known to vegetate after they have been kept for a hundred years. In passing through a wood near Acquia Creek, on a hot day, we came upon a large snake, about four feet long, resembling that called the mocassin, which lifted itself up, folding its body into several graceful coils, and then darted its head and neck forward at a dog which had followed us from the inn. The dog dexterously retreated as often -as a blow was aimed at him, bark ing loudly, and enjoying the rnock fight. The extremity of the snake's tail, although not armed with a rattle, was in a state of constant vibration. On a soft sandy road we saw a great many of the ball-rolling beetles (Ateuchus volvens), which resemble in form the Scarabceus sacer of Egypt. They were all busily engaged in pushing along round balls of dung, in the center of some of which we found an egg, and in others a maggot. A pair of beetles was occupied with each globular mass, which considerably exceeded themselves in size. One of them went before, and usually climbed up the side of the ball till the weight of its body made the mass fall over, the other pushing behind, so as to urge it forward, or at * Vol. i. p. 211. 246 MUSK-RATS. [CHAP. XXXVIII least prevent it from rolling back again. We saw two of them in half a minute force a ball for a distance of eighteen inches up a gentle slope, and when they reached a soft part of the road, one of them began to excavate a hole, and soon entirely disap peared under ground, heaving up the earth till it cracked and opened wide enough to allow his companion to push the ball of dung into it. The round mass immediately began to sink, and in a few minutes was out of sight. We saw another pair try in vain to bury their treasure, for they had selected a spot where the soil was too hard ; at last they gave up the attempt, and, rolling it away, set out in search of a more favorable spot. We crossed several plowed fields on the slope of the hills which descend toward the Potomac, where a singular kind of manure is used, consisting of dead fish, and almost exclusively of the bony pike, or gar-fish (Lepidosteus oxyurus). The hard stony scales resist decomposition for several years. The fishermen told us that they are greatly annoyed by constantly taking these pikes in their nets with the herrings. There is so enormous an abund ance of herrings in some spots in this estuary, that 50,000 have sometimes been taken this season in a few hours. In a marsh near the inn, we observed numerous habitations of the musk-rat, standing up like hay-cocks. When the small size of the animal is considered, the quantity of dried grass, reeds, and rushes accumulated in one of these hummocks, at least a cart-load, is surprising. We waded through the water to one of them, and found that it was four feet high, and nine feet in diameter. When we pulled it to pieces, the smell of musk was very perceptible. At the depth of about sixteen inches from the top we found a cavity, or chamber, and a small gallery leading from it to another chamber below, from which a second gallery descended, and then went upward again to a third chamber, from all which there was a perpendicular passage, leading down to below the level of the water, so that the rats can dive, and, without being seen again, enter their apartments, in which they breathe air. The unio, or fresh-water mussel, is a favorite food of these rats, and they often leave the shells on the banks of the American rivers, with one valve entire and the other broken. In the even- CHAP. XXXVIII.] HUMMING-BIRDS. 247 ing the note of the bull-frog, in these swamps, reminded me much of the twanging of a large Jew's harp. From Acquia Creek, I went, by steamer, to Washington, and thence by railway through Philadelphia to the town of Burling ton, in New Jersey, beautifully situated on the banks of the Delaware. Here I paid a short visit to my friend, Mr. William M'llvaine, and crossed the Delaware with him to Bristol, to renew my acquaintance with Mr. Vanuxem, a geologist of no ordinary merit. His death, which happened soon afterward, was a loss to the public as well as to many personal friends. In Wilson's " Ornithology" it is stated, that the humming bird migrates from the south to Pennsylvania the latter part of April, and builds its nest there about the middle of May. For the last thirty years, Mr. M'llvaine had never been disappointed in seeing it reach Burlington the first week of that month, gen erally about the middle of the week, its northward progress being apparently hastened or retarded by the mildness or inclemency of the season. They seem always to wait for the flowering of a species of horse-chestnut, called here the buck-eye, from a fancied likeness of its fruit to the eye of a deer. The bright-red blos soms of this tree supply the nourishment most attractive to these birds, whose arrival had been looked for the very day after I came. Strange to say, one of them, the avant-courier of the feathered host, actually appeared, and next morning, May 7th, hundreds were seen and heard flitting and humming over the trees. A lady sent us word that a straggler from the camp was imprisoned in her greenhouse, and, going there, I saw it poised in the air, sucking honey from the blossom of an orange-tree. The flower was evidently bent down slightly, as if the bird rested its bill upon it to aid its wings in supporting its body in the air, or to steady it. When it wished to go out, it went straight to the window at which it had entered, and, finding it closed, flew rapidly round the large conservatory, examining all parts of it, without once striking the glass or beating its wings against the wall, as the more timid of the feathered tribe are apt to do. No sooner, however, was a small casement opened, than it darted through it like an arrow. CHAPTER XXXIX. New York, clear Atmosphere and gay Dresses. — Omnibuses. — Naming of Streets. — Visit to Audubon. — Croton Aqueduct. — Harpers' Printing Establishment. — Large Sale of Works by English and American Authors. — Cheapness of Books. — International Copyright. — Sale of Eugene Sue's "Wandering Jew." — Tendency of the Work. — Mr. Gallatin on Indian Corn. — War with Mexico. — Facility of raising Troops. — Dr. Dewey preaching against War. — Cause of Influence of Unitarians. — Geological Excursion to Albany. — Helderberg War. — Voting Thanks to the Third House. — Place-hunting. — Spring Flowers — Geology andTaconic System. May 7, 1846. — ON our return to New York, we were struck with the brightness of the atmosphere in spring, arising not merely from the absence of smoke, but from the quantity of solar light as compared to England, this city being in the same latitude as Naples. The unsullied purity of the air makes gay and brilliant colors in dress and furniture appropriate. Every fortnight the " Journal des Modes" is received from France, and the ladies conform strictly to the Parisian costume. Except at balls and large parties, they wear high dresses, and, as usual in mercantile communities, spare no expense. Embroi dered muslin, of the finest and costliest kind, is much worn ; and my wife learnt that sixteen guineas were not unfrequently given for a single pocket handkerchief. Extravagantly expensive fans, with ruby or emerald pins, are also common. I had heard it said in France that no orders sent to Lyons for the furnishing of private mansions, are on so grand a scale as some of those received from New York ; and I can well believe it, for we saw many houses gorgeously fitted up with satin and velvet draperies, rich Axmin- ster carpets, marble and inlaid tables, and large looking-glasses, the style in general being Parisian rather than English. It was much more rare here than at Boston to see a library forming part of a suite of reception-rooms, or even a single book-case in a drawing-room, nor are pictures so common here. CHAP. XXXIX.] OMNIBUSES. 249 In the five months since we were last in this metropolis, whole streets had been built, and several squares finished in the northern or fashionable end of the town, to which the merchants are now resorting, leaving the business end, near the Battery, where they formerly lived. Hence there is a constant increase of omnibuses passing through Broadway, and other streets running north and south . Groups of twelve of these vehicles may be seen at once, each with a single driver, for wages are too high to support a cad. Each omnibus has an opening in the roof, through which the money is paid to the coachman. We observed, as one woman after another got out, any man sitting near the door, though a stranger, would jump down to hand her out, and, if it was raining, would hold an umbrella over her, frequently offering, in that case, to escort her to a shop, attentions which are com monly accepted and received by the women as matters of course. All the streets which cross Broadway, run east and west, and are numbered, so that they have now arrived at 146th-street — a mode of designating the different parts of the metropolis worthy of imitation on both sides of the Atlantic, since experience has now proved that there is in the Anglo-Saxon mind an inherent poverty of invention in matters of nomenclature. For want of some municipal regulations like those of New York, the same names are indefinitely multiplied in every great city, and letters, after wandering over all the streets bearing the same appellation, to the infinite inconvenience and cost of the post-office, are at length received, if haply they ever reach their destination, long after they are due. The low island on which New York is built, is composed of granite and gneiss covered with " drift" and boulders. The original surface being very uneven, the municipality has fixed upon a certain grade or level to which all heights must be lowered by blasting the rocks or by carting away the gravel, and up to which all the cavities must be raised. Besides other advantages of this leveling process, the ground is said to become more healthy and free from malaria, there being no longer any stagnant pools of water standing in the hollows. May 10. — Paid a visit to Mr. Audubon, the celebrated orni- !<* 250 CROTON AQUEDUCT. [CHAP. XXXIX. thologist, at his delightful residence on the banks of the Hudson, north of Bloomingdale. His son had just returned from Texas, where he had been studying the natural history of that country, especially the mammalia, and was disappointed at the few oppor tunities he had enjoyed of seeing the wild land quadrupeds in a state of activity, so as to observe their habits. I told him I had been equally surprised at the apparent scarcity of this tribe in the native forests of the United States. This whole class of animals, he said, ought to be regarded as properly nocturnal ; for not merely the feline tribe and the foxes, the weasels and bats, shun the daylight, but many others feed partly by night, most of the squirrels and bears, for example. The ruminants no doubt are an exception, yet even the deer and the buffalo, like the wild horse, travel chiefly in the night. From Mr. Audubon's I went to Highbridge, where the Croton water is made to play for the amusement of visitors, and is thrown up in a column to the height of 120 feet. I went also to see the reservoir, inclosing an area of no less than thirty-six acres, from which the water is distributed to all parts of New York. In this artificial lake all the river sediment is deposited, the basin being divided into two parts, so that one may be cleaned out while the other is in use. The tunnel or pipe conveying the water for a distance of more than thirty miles, from the source to the Harlem Hiver, is so large, that the chief engineer and commissioners of the works were able to float down it in a flat-bottomed boat when it was first opened, in July, 1842. While at New York, we were taken by our literary friend, Mr. Cogswell, over the printing and publishing establishment of the Harpers, the largest in America, and only surpassed, in the scale of its operations, by two or three in Great Britain. They give employment to three hundred men, manufacture their own types and paper, and have a " bookbindery" under the same roof; for, in order to get out, with the utmost dispatch, the reprints of foreign works not entitled to copyright, they require to be inde pendent of all aid from other traders. We were shown a fire proof vault, in which stereotype plates, valued at 300,000 dollars, are deposited. In one of the upper stories a long line of steam- CHAP. XXXIX.] HARPERS' PRINTING-OFFICE. 251 presses was throwing off sheets of various works, and the greater number were occupied with the printing of a large illustrated Bible, and Morse's Geography for the use of schools. In 1845, the Harpers sold two millions of volumes, some of them, it is true, being only styled numbers, but these often contain a reprint of an entire English novel, originally published in two or three volumes, at the cost of a guinea and a half, the same being sold here for one or two shillings. Several of Bulwer's tales are among these, 40,000 copies of his "Last of the Barons" having just issued from this house. It may, indeed, be strictly said of English writers in general, that they are better known in America than in Europe. Of the best English works of fiction, published at thirty-one shillings in England, and for about sixpence here, it is estimated that about ten times as many copies are sold in the United States as in Great Britain ; nor need we wonder at this, when we con sider that day laborers in an American village often purchase a novel by Scott, Bulwer, or Dickens, or a popular history, such as Alison's Europe (published at thirteen pounds in England and sixteen shillings in America), and read it at spare moments, while persons in a much higher station in England are debarred from a similar intellectual treat by considerations of economy. It might have been apprehended that, where a daily newspaper can be bought for a halfpenny, and a novel for sixpence, the public mind would be so taken up with politics and light reading, that no time would be left for the study of history, divinity, and the graver periodical literature. But, on the contrary, experience has proved that, when the habit and facility of reading has been acquired by the perusal even of trashy writings, there is a steady increase in the number of those who enter on deeper subjects. I was glad to hear that, in proportion as the reading public augments annually, the quality of the books read is decidedly improving. About four years ago, 40,000 copies were printed of the ordinary common-place novels published in England, of which sort they now only sell about 8000. It might also have been feared that the cheapness of foreign works unprotected by copyright, would have made it impossible 252 CHEAPNESS OF BOOKS. [CHAP. XXXIX. for native authors to obtain a price capable of remunerating them highly, as well as their publishers. But such is not the case. Very large editions of Prescott's " Ferdinand and Isabella," and of his " Mexico," and " Peru," have been sold at a high price ; and when Mr. Harper stated to me his estimate of the original value of the copyright of these popular works, it appeared to me that an English author could hardly have obtained as much in his own country.* The comparative cheapness of American books, the best editions of which are by no means in small print, seems at first unintelligible, when we consider the dearness of labor, which enters so largely into the price of printing, paper, and binding. But, first, the number of readers, thanks to the free-schools, is prodigiously great, and always augmenting in a higher ratio even than the population ; and, secondly, there is a fixed determination on the part of the people at large to endure any taxation, rather than that which would place books and newspapers beyond their reach. Several politicians declared to me that not only an income tax, but a window tax, would be preferred ; and " this last," said they, " wrould scarcely shut out the light from a greater number of individuals." The duty on paper, in the United States, is trifling, when compared to that paid in Great Britain. Mr. Chambers informs us, that the Government duty of 5000Z., paid by him for his Miscellany, in twenty volumes, was equal in amount to the whole profits of that publication. The cost of advertisements, in America, is also small. One of my American friends sent over to a London publisher 250 copies of his work, charging him 4s. 6d. each. * A letter dated April 15, 1849, was lately shown me from the Harpers, with permission to make known its contents, in which they mentioned, that having been authorized by Mr. Macaulay to publish in America his " His tory of England," they had printed six editions at various prices varying from four dollars to fifty cents (sixteen shillings and sixpence to two shillings) . At the expiration of the first three months, they had sold 40,000 copies, and other booksellers who had issued independent editions had sold about 20,000 ; so that 60,000 copies had been purchased in the United States at a time when about 13,000 had been disposed of by Longman and Co., in London, at the price of 11. 12s. each. As the cheap American editions were only just brought into the market at the date of this letter, the principal sale of the book was but commencing. CHAP. XXXIX.] INTERNATIONAL COPYRIGHT. 253 After paying entrance duties, and necessary outlay for advertise ments in London, and the agency, it was found that the price must be as high as 1 6s. The party who are in favor of an international copyright be tween England and the United States, seems to be steadily gaining strength among the booksellers, publishers, and authors, although the editors of newspapers and their readers may per haps oppose the measure for some time. The number of reprisals now made by English speculators are very numerous. According to a statement lately presented to Congress by Mr. Jay, of New York, there are about 600 original American works "pirated" in Great Britain ; or, to speak more correctly, while the law remains in its present state, reprinted without leave of their American authors, or any pecuniary acknowledgment to them. Many are of opinion that the small print of cheap editions in the United States, will seriously injure the eyesight of the rising generation, especially as they often read in railway cars, devouring whole novels, printed in newspapers, in very inferior type. Mr. Everett, speaking of this literature, in an address to the students of Harvard College, said, "If cheap it can be called, which begins by costing a man his eyes, and ends by perverting his taste and morals." As an illustration of the mischievous tendency of the indiscrim inate reading of popular works by the multitude, when the higher classes and clergy can exert little or no control in the selection of the books read, the wonderful success of Eugene Sue's " Wan dering Jew" was pointed out to me by many, with no small concern. This led me to ask Mr. Harper how many copies he had disposed of, and he answered, "80,000, issued in different shapes, and at various prices." It had so often been thrust into my hands in railway cars, and so much talked of, that, in the course of my journey, I began to read it in self-defense ; and, having begun, could not stop till I had finished the whole, although the style of the original loses half its charms in an imperfect translation. " Le vieux dragon," for example, is always rendered the " old dragon," instead of " dragoon," and the poetry of a brilliant passage is nearly destroyed by "defense" 254 « THE WANDERING JEW." [CHAP. XXXIX. being translated " defense," instead of " barrier," with other blunders equally unpardonable. Yet the fascination of the orig inal, and its power to fix the attention, triumph over these dis advantages, and over the violence done to probability in the general plot, and over the extravagance of many of its details. The gross, sensual, and often licentious descriptions in which the author indulges, in some scenes, and still more, such sentimental immorality as is involved in the sympathy demanded for Hardy's love and intrigue with a married woman (he being represented as the model of a high-minded philanthropist), make one feel the con trast of such a work with the chaste and pure effusions of Scott's genius. Yet there is much pure feeling, many touches of tenderness in the tale, and many passages fitted to awaken our best affec tions. Even the false political economy bordering on communism, is redeemed by the tendency of the book to excite sympathy for the sufferings, destitution, and mental degradation of the poor. The dramatic power displayed in many scenes, is of a high order ; as when the Jesuit Rodin, receiving his credentials from Rome, is suddenly converted into the superior of the haughty chief to whom he had been previously the humble secretary, and where Dago- bert's wife, under the direction of her confessor, refuses, in opposi tion to a husband whom she loves and respects, to betray the place of concealment of two young orphans, the victims of a vile conspiracy. In this part of the narrative, moreover, the beauty of the devotional character of the female mind is done full justice to, while the evils of priestly domination are exhibited in their true colors. The imprisonment of a young girl, of strong mind and superior understanding, in a madhouse, until she is worked upon almost to doubt her own sanity, are described with much delicacy of feeling and pathos, and make the reader shudder at the facility with which such institutions, if not subject to public inspection, may be, and have been abused. The great moral and object of the whole piece, is to expose the worldly ambition of the Romanist clergy, especially of the Jesuits, and the injury done, not only to the intellectual progress of society at large, but to the peace and happiness of private families, by their perpetual meddling with domestic concerns. That the shafts CHAP. XXXIX.] MR. GALLATIN ON INDIAN CORN. 255 of this satire have not missed their aim, has been proved, among other evidences, by its having been thought politic, even in En gland, to circulate, chiefly, it is said, among the Irish Catholics, an " Adaptation of the Wandering Jew, from the original of Eugene Sue." In this singular re-cast of the French romance, which I have perused, the Russian police is every where substituted for the Jesuits, and Rodin becomes the tool of the Czar, intriguing in French politics, instead of the servant of the successor of Ig natius Loyola. On the whole, I am inclined to believe that the good preponderates over the evil, in the influence exerted on the million, even by such a romance. It has a refining rather than a corrupting effect, and may lead on to the study of works of a more exalting character. The great step is gained, when the powers of the imagination have been stimulated and the dormant and apathetic mind awakened and lifted above the prosaic mono tony of every-day life. May 9. — Called with a letter of introduction on Mr. Gallatin, well known by a long and distinguished career in political life. As a diplomatist in London, he negotiated the original Oregon treaty with Great Britain, and has now, at the age of eighty- two, come out with several able and spirited pamphlets, to de monstrate to his countrymen that their national honor would not be compromised by accepting the terms offered by the British Cabinet. Being at the same time an experienced financier, he has told them plainly, if they will go to war, how much it will cost them annually, and what taxes they should make up their minds to submit to cheerfully, if they would carry on a campaign with honor and spirit against such an enemy. In the course of conversation I found that Mr. Gallatin was of opinion that the indigenous civilization of several Indian tribes, and of the Mexicans and Peruvians among others, was mainly due to the possession of a grain so productive, and, when dried in the sun, so easily kept for many years, as the maize or Indian corn. The potato, which, when healthy, can rarely be stored up and pre served till the next harvest, may be said, on the contrary, to be a food on which none but an improvident race would lean for sup port. " I have long been convinced," said Mr. Gallatin, " that 256 WAR WITH MEXICO. [CHAP. XXXIX. the Indian corn has also given a powerful impulse to the rapid settlement of the whites in Ohio, Indiana, Illinois, and other western states. In one of my first excursions to the west, I saw a rnan felling trees in March, who, when I returned in October, had harvested a crop of Indian corn, grown on the very spot. He had also the leaves and stems of the plant to serve for winter fodder for his cattle. He was an emigrant, newly arrived, and entirely without the capital indispensable to enable him to culti vate wheat, which must have been twelve or thirteen months in the ground before it could be reaped." Next day the stirring news of the invasion of the Mexican territory by the American army, reached New York, and I met the news-boys, in every street, crying out, "War with Mexico!" Soon afterward I saw the walls covered with placards, headed with the words, " Ho, for the halls of the Montezumas !" The mayor had called a public meeting to express sympathy with the President and the war-party at Washington. This meeting was held in the Park, and although it may have served the purpose of the democratic party, it was certainly a signal failure, if any strong expression of popular feeling in favor of such a war was looked for. In the crowd I heard nothing but Irish, Scotch, and German accents, and the only hearty cheer which any one orator could draw, even from this mob of foreigners, was obtained by representing the Mexicans as acting under the influence of British gold. I met with no one person in society who defended the aggres sion on the Mexican territory ; but, as they can not prevent it, they endeavor, each in his way, to comfort themselves that the mischief is no worse, some saying, it will be a less evil than fighting with Great Britain ; others that it will furnish employ ment for a host of turbulent spirits ; while some merchants hint that the democratic party, had they been economical, might have lowered the tariff, and carried out their dangerous theory of free trade, whereas now they will plunge the nation into debt, and be compelled to resort to high duties, which will " protect native industry." The dissatisfaction of others is unbounded ; they dread the annexation of a region containing five millions of CHAP. XXXIX.] RAISING TROOPS. 257 Indians, which, say they, will deteriorate the general standard of the white population ; — they deplore the development of a love for military glory, a passion inconsistent with all true republican principles ; — and one friend observed to me, " You will soon see a successful soldier, wholly unknown to all of us at this moment, a man unversed in civil affairs, raised to the Presidentship." I asked whether, in a country where nearly all are industriously employed, it will be possible to find recruits for foreign service. Nothing, they reply, is more easy. " Our broad Indian frontier has nurtured a daring and restless population, which loves ex citement and adventure, and in the southern states there are numbers of whites to whom military service would be a boon, because slavery has degraded labor." A week later I received a letter from a correspondent in the south, who said, " Such is the military fever in Arkansas, Louisiana, Alabama, and Mississippi, that these states alone would furnish 50,000 men, if required ; and in many districts we are in fear of such an enlistment of the white population, that there will be too few left at home to serve as a police for the negroes. Married men are going, as well as bachelors, lawyers, medical men, and schoolmasters, many of whom have no taste whatever for fighting or foreign service, but they know that to have served a year in a campaign, to have been in a battle, or have been wounded, would advance them more in an election, or even in their several professions, than any amount of study or acquired knowledge." The Sunday following we heard a sermon by the Rev. Orville Dewey, in which this spirit of territorial aggrandizement, this passion for war, these false notions of national honor and glory, were characterized as unchristian, and indicating a low standard of private as well as public morality. I remarked to a New England acquaintance, who was one of the large congregation, that whatever might be said against the voluntary system, the pulpit in America seemed to me more independent than the press. " Because every newspaper," he replied, " is supported by half yearly or annual subscribers, and no editor dares write against the popular sentiment. He knows that a dagger is always sus pended over him by a thread, and if he presumed to run counter 258 DR. DEWEY— UNITARIANISM. [CHAP. XXXIX. to the current, his table would be covered next morning- with letters each beginning with the dreaded words, ' Stop my paper.' He has made a bargain, like that of Dr. Faustus, with the devil, bartering away his immortal soul for a few thousand dollars." When I afterward reflected on this alleged tyranny of regular subscribers, it occurred to me that the evil must be in a great degree mitigated by the cheapness and variety of daily prints, each the organ of some distinct party or shade of opinion, and great numbers of them freely taken in at every reading-room and every hotel. I might say of Dr. Dewey's discourse, as I have already said of the preaching of the Unitarians generally, that, without want ing spirituality, it was more practical and less doctrinal than the majority of sermons to which I have been accustomed to listen. But I should mislead my readers, if I gave them to understand that they could frequent churches of this denomination without risk of sometimes having their feelings offended by hearing doc trines they have been taught to reverence treated slightingly, or even with contempt. On one occasion (and it was the only one in my experience), I was taken, when at Boston, to hear an emi nent Unitarian preacher, who was prevented by illness from offi ciating, and his place was supplied by a self-satisfied young man, who, having talked dogmatically on points contested by many a rationalist, made it clear that he commiserated the weak minds of those who adhered to articles of faith rejected by his church. If this too common method of treating theological subjects be ill calculated to convince or conciliate dissentients, it is equally reprehensible from its tendency to engender, in the minds of those who assent, a Pharisaical feeling of self-gratulation that they are not as other sectarians are. T can only account for the power which the Unitarians have exerted, and are now exerting, in forwarding the great education al movement in America, in the face of that almost superstitious prejudice with which their theology is regarded by nineteen- twentieths of the population, by attributing it to the love of intellectual progress which animates both their clergy and laity, and the deep conviction they are known to feel that public moral- CHAP. XXXIX.] EXCURSION TO ALBANY. 259 ity and happiness can only be insured by spreading an elevated standard of popular education throughout the masses. In their enthusiastic pursuit of this great end, they are acknowledged to have no thought of making proselytes to any system of religious doctrines, and are therefore trusted in the management of schools by the parents of children of the most opposite persuasions. In regard to their own faith, some misapprehension has arisen, in consequence of the name they bear, which was not chosen by themselves, but to which, on the contrary, they have objections, such as members of the Anglican Church might feel if some such name as Anti-transubstantiationists, or any term which simply expressed their opposition to some one article of the Romanist creed, had been fixed upon them. When the rigid Calvinism of the old Puritans caused a schism in New England, the seceders wished to free themselves from the fetters of a creed, and to take the Gospel alone as their standard of faith. They were naturally, therefore, averse to accept a name which might be generally supposed to imply that they attached a prominent importance to the negation of any one doctrine professed by other Christians. "I desire," said Charming, " to wear the livery of no party; but we accept the appellation which others have imposed upon us, because it expresses what we believe to be a truth, and therefore we ought not to shrink from the reproaches cast upon it. But, had the name been more honored, had no popular cry been raised against it, I would gladly have thrown it off."* May 11. — Sailed from New York to Albany in a steamer, which carried me at the rate of eighteen miles an hour through the beautiful scenery of the Hudson Hiver. I had been invited by two of the state surveyors of New York to make an excursion with them to the north of Albany, and to discuss in the field some controverted points respecting the geology of the oldest fos- siliferous strata. There was a physician on board, who, having been settled for twenty-six years in Virginia, had now come back, after that long absence, to see his native state. His admiration and wonder at the progress made by New York in a quarter of a century were unbounded. Speaking of his adopted country, * Channing's Works, vol. iii. p. 210. 260 HELDERBERG WAR. [CHAP. XXXIX. he exclaimed, " We have been left far behind in the race." I suggested, that if, twenty-six years ago, a period had been fixed upon by law for the emancipation of their slaves, Virginia might, ere this, have been relieved of nearly all her negro population, so great has been the migration of negroes to the south. " It is useless," he said, "to discuss the practicability of such a measure, while the majority of our legislators, having been born slave holders, are not convinced of its desirability." While my com panion was absorbed in admiration at the improvement of " the Empire State," my thoughts and feelings took a very different turn, when I learned that "the Helderberg war," which I have alluded to in my former " Travels,"^ is still going on, and seems as far from a termination as ever. The agricultural population through out many populous counties have now been in arms for eight years, to resist payment of rents due to their landlords, in spite of the decisions of the courts of law against them. Large con tributions have been made toward an insurrectionary fund — one of its objects being to support a newspaper, edited Ijy a Chartist refugee from England, in which the most dangerous anti-social doctrines are promulgated. The " anti-renters" have not only set the whole militia of the state at defiance, in more than one campaign, but have actually killed a sheriff's officer, who was distraining for rent ! If any thing could add to the disgrace which such proceedings reflect on the political administration of affairs in New York, it is the fact that the insurgents would probably have succumbed ere this, had they not been buoyed up by hopes of legislative interference in their favor, held out to them by popularity-hunting candidates for the governorship, and other official places. In the newspapers of the day, a scene described as having occurred at the close of the legislative session in Albany excited my curiosity. One of the members of the House of Representa tives moved a vote of thanks " to the gentlemen of the third house for the regularity of their attendance and the courtesy with which they had conducted themselves." The motion was seconded, read from the chair amidst great laughter, and then * Vol. i. p. 68. CHAP. XXXIX.] "THE THIRD HOUSE." 261 allowed to drop. I inquired what might be the meaning of this joke, and was asked in reply whether I had read the letters of Jesse Hoyt and others, edited by Mackenzie ? I had, indeed, purchased the pamphlet alluded to, containing a selection from an immense mass (said to amount to twenty-five volumes) of the private and confidential correspondence of official men, left acci dentally by them, on a change of administration, in the custom house of New York. All these had been printed for the benefit of the public by their successors. The authenticity of the docu ments made known by this gentlemanlike stroke of party tactics, purporting to be penned by men who had filled high places in the State and Federal Governments, had been placed beyond a doubt ; for the writers had attempted to obtain an injunction in the law courts to stop the publication, claiming the copyright of letters which they had written. Some time before this conver sation, a merchant of Boston, who wished me to look only on the bright side of their institutions, and who was himself an optimist, had said to me, " Our politicians work in a glass hive, so that you always see the worst of them ; whereas your public men can throw a decent vail of secrecy over much that may be selfish and sordid in the motives of their conduct. Hence the scandal of your court and cabinets is only divulged to posterity, a hundred years after the events, in private memoirs." Unfortunately for this theory, a glance at the Mackenzie letters was enough to teach me, that, if the American bees work in a glass hive, the glass is not quite so transparent as my friend would have led me to believe. The explanation of the satirical motion made in the House at Albany, then proceeded thus : " The patronage of the State of New York is enormous ; the Governor alone has the appointment of two hundred and sixty civil officers, and the nomination of more than two thousand places is vested jointly in him and the senate. Some of these are for two, others for five years, and they are worth from two hundred to five thousand dollars a year. Among the posts most coveted, because the gains are sometimes very high, though fluctuating, are those of the inspectors, who set their mark or brand on barrels of exported goods, such as flour, tobacco, preserved pork, mackerel and other 262 PLACE-HUNTING. [CHAP. XXXIX. fish, to guarantee their good quality, arid guard the public against imposition, in cases where the articles would be injured if opened and examined by the purchaser. It is scarcely necessary to state, that where the prey is so abundant, there will the eagles be gath ered together ; and besides the aspirants to vacant offices, there is a crowd of lawyers and paid agents of private individuals and companies, who have to watch the passage of private and public bills through the legislature. During the whole session, they fill the Governor's ante-room, and the lobby of each house ; and, as they are equal in respectability, number, station, and influence, to the two other houses put together, besides that they spend, perhaps, more money in Albany, we dignify them with the name of < the third house.' " " Are they," said I, " suspected of giving money-bribes to legislators ?" " No ; but they may convey a party of repre sentatives on a railway trip, to make them acquainted with the merits of some case relating to a canal or railroad, and then entertain them with a dinner before they return." " In Massa chusetts," said I, " people speak with more respect of their assembly." '• No doubt, for in that state there is much less to give away, and therefore less corruption and intrigue. Besides, we have only 160 senators and representatives, whereas the assembly at Boston is far more numerous, so that it is not so easy to bring the influence of 'the third house' to bear upon it." In the public museum at Albany, Dr. Emmons showed me a fine collection of simple minerals, rocks, and fossils, made by himself and other geologists to whom the state survey was intrusted. He then accompanied me across the Hudson River, to examine the slate and limestone eastward of Albany. Here, from the summit of Greenbush Hill, we enjoyed a magnificent view of the Catskill Mountains, and the Helderberg range in the distance. In the foreground was the river, and Albany itself, now containing a population of 40,000 inhabitants, with its domes and spires clustered together, in the higher parts of the city, and lighted up by a bright sunshine. The day following, Dr. Emmon.s and Mr. James Hall went with me to explore the chain of the Bald Mountains, north of CHAP. XXXIX.] SPRLNG FLOWERS— GEOLOGY. 263 Galeville. We passed through the gay town of Saratoga Springs, where the mineral waters burst out from "the Lower Silurian," or most ancient fossiliferous rocks. We saw many picturesque spots, especially the waterfall called Baaten Kill, near Galeville, but no grand or striking scenery. Among the plants in blossom, we gathered Anemone nemorosa, Trientalis americana (less beautiful than our British Trientalis europcea), Cypripedium pubescens, Geranium sylvaticum, three species of violet (all without scent), Homtonia ccerulea, Gnaplialium perenne, and in several copses, the beautiful Polygala paucijlora, which might be truly said — " To purple all the ground with vernal flowers." Whether, in this part of the United States, there are any fos siliferous rocks older than the Lower Silurian, was the geological point at issue ; and the question resembled one on which an animated controversy had lately been carried on in Great Britain, in regard to the relative ages of the " Cambrian" and " Silu rian" groups. As those strata, called Cambrian, which contained organic remains, were found to be nothing more than highly disturbed and semi-crystalline Silurian rocks, so I believe the formations called Taconic in the United States, to have claim to no higher antiquity, and to be simply Silurian strata much altered, and often quite metamorphic. CHAPTER XL. Construction and Management of Railways in America. — Journey by Long Island from New York to Boston. — Whale Fishery in the Pacific. — Chewing Tobacco. — Visit to Wenham Lake. — Cause of the superior Permanence of Wenham Lake Ice. — Return to Boston. — Skeletons of Fossil Mastodons. — Food of those extinct Quadrupeds. — Anti-war De monstration. — Voyage to Halifax. — Dense Fog. — Large Group of Ice bergs seen on the Ocean. — Transportation of Rocks by Icebergs. — Danger of fast Sailing among Bergs. — Aurora Borealis. — Connection of this Phenomenon with drift Ice. — Pilot with English Newspapers. — Return to Liverpool. May 21, 1846. — IN the construction and management of railways, the Americans have in general displayed more prudence and economy than could have been expected, where a people of such sanguine temperament were entering on so novel a career of enterprise. Annual dividends of seven or eight per cent, have been returned for a large part of the capital laid out on the New England railways, and on many others in the northern states. The cost of passing the original bills through the state parliaments has usually been very moderate, and never exorbitant ; the lines have been carried as much as possible through districts where land was cheap ; a single line only laid down where the traffic did not justify two ; high gradients resorted to, rather than incur the expense of deep cuttings ; tunnels entirely avoided ; very little money spent in building station-houses ; and, except where the population was large, they have been content with the speed of fourteen or sixteen miles an hour. It has, moreover, been an invariable maxim " to go for numbers," by lowering the fares so as to bring them within the reach of all classes. Occasionally, when the intercourse between two rich and populous cities, like New York and Boston, has excited the eager competition of rival companies, they have accelerated the speed far beyond the usual average ; and we were carried from one metropolis to the other, CHAP. XL.J WHALE FISHERY. -2G5 a distance of 239 miles, at the rate of thirty miles an hour, in a commodious, lofty, and well- ventilated car, the charge being only three dollars, or thirteen shillings. We went by a route newly opened, first through Long Island, ninety-five miles in length, over a low, level tract, chiefly composed of fine sand ; and wo then found a steamer ready to take us across the Sound to New London in Connecticut, where we were met by the cars at Point Allen ; after which we enjoyed much delightful scenery, the rail way following the margin of a river, where there were cascades and rapids foaming over granite rocks, and overhung with trees, whose foliage, just unfolded, was illumined by a brilliant sun shine. In the estuary of New London we saw many large whalers, arid a merchant talked to me with satisfaction of the success of the United States whale-fishery in the Pacific, saying it amounted to 200,000 tons, while that of Great Britain did not exceed 60,000. "Five fish," said he, "is the usual cargo of an English whaler, as they boil the blubber at home, whereas the Americans boil it in a huge cauldron on deck, and after staying out three years, return with the oil of ninety whales in one ship. Our fishery in the Pacific is becoming a most important nursery for seamen, giving occupation to about 20,000 men, which would enable us at any moment to man a powerful fleet. The possession of California is therefore much coveted by us, because the port of San Francisco is the only one in the northern Pacific not exposed to the west wind, or blocked up by a bar of sand, such as that which renders the mouth of the Columbia River impassable to large ships. It is not territory but a sea-port we need, and this advantage a war with Mexico may give us." There was besides much characteristic conversation in the cars, about constructing a railway 4000 miles long from Washington to the Columbia River ; and some of the passengers were specu lating on the hope of seeing in their lifetime a population of 15,000 souls settled in Oregon and California. A variety of plans was also freely discussed for crossing the isthmus from the Gulf of Mexico into the Pacific, so as to avoid the long and dangerous voyage round Cape Horn. A ship-canal across the isthmus of VOL. II. M 2G6 CHEWING TOBACCO. [CHAP. XL. Tehuantepec, 135 miles in length, was alluded to as the favorite scheme ; and the expediency of forcing Mexico to cede a right of way was spoken of as if the success of their campaign was certain. It is the fashion for travelers in the New World to dwell so much on the chewing of tobacco, that I may naturally be ex pected to say something of this practice. There is enough of it 1<> bo very annoying in steamboats and railway-cars, but far less so as we journey northward ; and T never saw, even in the south, :uiy chewing of the weed in drawing-rooms, although we were told in South Carolina that some old gentlemen still indulged in I his habit. That it is comparatively rare in the New England stales, was attested by an anecdote related to me of a captain \\lio commands one of the steamers on Lake Champlain, who prided himself on the whiteness of his deck, intended to be kept as a promenade. Observing a southerner occasionally polluting its clean iloor, he ordered a boy to follow him up and down with a s\v;ib, to the infinite diversion of the passengers, and the no small indignation of the southerner, when at length he discovered how his footsteps had been dodged. The governor of a peniten tiary told me, that to deprive prisoners of tobacco was found to be a very efficient punishment, and that its use was prohibited in the New England madhouses, as being too exciting. From Boston we went to Ipswich, in Massachusetts, to visit Mr. Oakes, the botanist, with whom we had spent many pleasant days in the White Mountains.* lie set out with us on an ex cursion to Wenham Lake, from which so much ice is annually exported 1o England and other parts of the world. This lake lies about twenty miles to the northeast of Boston. It has a small island in the middle of it, is about a mile long and lorl y feet deep, arid is surrounded by hills of sand and gravel, from forty to a hundred feel high. The water is always clear and pure, and the bottom covered with white quartzose sand. It is fed by springs, and receives no mud from any stream flowing into it ; but at the lower extremity a small brook of transparent water Hows out. In some parts, however, there must, I presume, be a soft and muddy bottom, as it is inhabited by eels, as well as by * See vol. i. p. 64. CHAP. XL.] WENHAM LAKE ICE. 267 pickerel and perch. Mr. Oakes had recently received a present of a snapping turtle, weighing 25 Ibs., taken from the lake. The ice is conveyed by railway to Boston to be shipped, and the in crease of business has of late been such as to cause the erection of new buildings, measuring 127 feet by 120, and 24 feet high. They stand on the water's edge, by the side of the old store houses, which are very extensive, built of wood, with double walls two feet apart, the space between being filled with saw dust, which excludes the external air ; while tan is heaped up, for the same purpose, on the outside. The work of cutting and storing the ice is carried on in winter, and is not commenced till the ice is at least a foot thick. The surface is always carefully swept and kept free from snow ; and as none but the most com pact and solid ice is fit for the market, it is necessary to shave off three inches or more of the superficial ice, by means of a machine called an ice-plane, drawn by a horse. This operation is especially required after a thaw or a fall of rain, succeeded by a frost, which causes the lake to be covered with opaque, porous ice. Sir Francis Head, in his "Emigrant," 1846, has attributed the durability of the Wenham Lake ice, or its power of resisting liquefaction, to the intense cold of a North American winter. It is perfectly true that this ice does not melt so fast as English ice ; but the cause of this phenomenon is, I believe, very different from that assigned for it by the late governor of Upper Canada. " People in England/' he says, " are prone to think that ice is ice; but the truth is, that the temperature of 32° Fahrenheit, that at which water freezes, is only the commencement of an operation that is almost infinite ; for after its congelation, water is as competent to continue to receive cold, as it was when it was fluid. The application of cold to a block of ice does not, as in the case of heat applied beneath boiling water, cause what is added at one end to fly out at the other : but, on the contrary, the cen* ter cold is added to and retained by the mass, and thus the tem perature of the ice falls with the temperature of the air, until in Lower Canada it occasionally sinks to 40° below zero, or 72° below the temperature of ice just congealed. It is evident, there fore, that if two ice-houses were to be filled, the one with Canada 268 WENHAM LAKE IOE. [CHAP. XL. ice, and the other with English ice, the difference between the quantity of cold stored up in each would be as appreciable as the difference between a cellar full of gold and a cellar full of copper ; that is to say, a cubic foot of Lower Canada ice is infinitely more valuable, or, in other words, it contains infinitely more cold, than. a cubic foot of Upper Canada ice, which again contains more cold than a cubic foot of Wenham ice, which contains infinitely more cold than a cubic foot of English ice ; and thus, although each of these four cubic feet of ice has precisely the same shape, they each, as summer approaches, diminish in value ; that is to say, they each gradually lose a portion of their cold, until, long before the Lower Canada ice has melted, the English ice has been converted into lukewarm water." There can be no doubt that where an intense frost gives rise to a great thickness of ice, permitting large cubic masses to be obtained after the superficial and porous ice has been planed off, a great advantage is afforded to the American ice merchant, and the low temperature acquired by the mass must prevent it from melting so readily when the hot season comes on, since it has first to be warmed up to 32° Fahrenheit, before it can begin to melt. Nevertheless, each fragment of ice, when removed from the store house, very soon acquires the temperature of 32° Fahrenheit, and yet when a lump of Wenham ice has been brought to En gland, it does not melt by any means so readily as a similar lump of common English ice. Mr. Faraday tells me that Wenham Lake ice is exceedingly pure, being both free from air-bubbles and from salts. The presence of the first makes it extremely difficult to succeed in making a lens of English ice which will concentrate the solar rays and readily fire gunpowder, whereas nothing is easier than to perform this singular feat of igniting a combustible body by the aid of a frozen mass, if Wenham ice be employed. The absence of salts conduces greatly to the permanence of the ice, for where water is so frozen that the salts expelled are still contained in air-cavities and cracks, or form thin films be tween the layers of the ice, these entangled salts cause the ice to melt at a lower temperature than 32°, and the liquefied portions give rise to streams and currents within the body of the ice, which CHAP. XL.] RETURN TO BOSTON. 269 rapidly carry heat to the interior. The mass then goes on thaw ing within as well as without, and at temperatures below 32° ; whereas pure and compact Wenham ice can only thaw at 32°, and only on the outside of the mass. Boston, May, 23. — Sir Humphrey Davy, in his " Consola tions in Travel,"*1 has said, that he never entered London, after having been absent for some time, without feelings of pleasure and hope ; for there he could enjoy the most refined society in the grand theater of intellectual activity, the metropolis of the world of business, thought, and action, in politics, literature, and science. I have more than once experienced the same feelings of hope and pleasure after having wandered over the less populous and civilized parts of the United States, when I returned to Boston, and never more so than on this occasion, when, after traveling over so large a space in the southern and western states, we spent ten days in the society of our literary and scientific friends in the metropolis of Massachusetts, and in the flourishing univer sity in its suburbs. They who wish to give a true picture of the national character of America, what it now is, and is destined to become, must study chiefly those towns which contain the great est number of native-born Citizens. They must sojourn in the east, rather than in the west or south, not among the six millions who are one half African and the other half the owners of negroes, nor among the settlers in the back-woods, who are half Irish, German, or Norwegians, nor among the people of French origin in Louisiana ; for, however faithfully they may portray the pecu liarities of such districts, they will give no better a representation of America, than an accurate description of Tipperary, Conne- mara, the West Indies, French Canada, Australia, and the vari ous lands into which Great Britain is pouring her surplus popu lation, would convey of England. Among other scientific novelties at Boston, I was taken to see two magnificent skeletons, recently obtained, of the huge masto don, one of them found in Warren County, New Jersey, which a farmer had met with six feet below the surface, when digging * P. 168. 270 FOSSIL MASTODON. [CHAP. XL. out the rich mud from a small pond newly drained. There were no less than six skeletons, five of them lying together, and the sixth and largest about ten feet apart from the rest. A large portion of the bones crumbled to pieces as soon as they were exposed to the air, but nearly the whole of the separate specimen was preserved. Dr. John Jackson called my attention to the in teresting fact that this perfect skeleton proved the correctness of Cuvier's conjecture respecting this extinct animal, namely, that it had twenty ribs, like the elephant, although no more than nine teen had ever been previously found. From the clay in the in terior within the ribs, just where the contents of the stomach might naturally have been looked for, seven bushels of vegetable matter had been extracted ; and Professor Webster, of Harvard College, had the kindness to present me with some of it, which has since been microscopically examined for me in London by Mr. A. Henfrey, of the Geological Survey. He informs me that it consists of pieces of the small twigs of a coniferous tree of the cypress family ; and they resemble in structure the young shoots of the white cedar ( Thuja occidentalis), still a native of North America, on which, therefore, we may conclude that the masto don fed. But a still nobler specimen of this great proboscidian quadru ped was exhumed in August, 1845, in the town of Newburg, New York, and purchased by Dr. John C. Warren, Professor of Anatomy in Harvard University. It is the most complete, and, perhaps, the largest ever met with. The bones contain a consid erable proportion of their original gelatine, and are firm in text ure. The tusks, when discovered, were ten feet long ; but the larger part of them had decomposed, and could not be preserved. The length of the skeleton was twenty-five feet, and its height twelve feet, the anchylosing of the two last ribs on the right side affording the comparative anatomist a true guage for the space occupied by the intervertebrate substance, so as to enable him to form a correct estimate of the entire length. Dr. Warren gave me an excellent Daguerreotype of this skeleton for Mr. Clift, of the College of Surgeons in London. Nothing is more remarkable than the large proportion of ani- CHAP. XL.] ANTI-WAR DEMONSTRATION. 271 mal matter in the tusks, teeth, and bones of many of these extinct mammalia, amounting in some cases, as Dr. C. T. Jackson has ascertained by analysis, to 27 per cent., so that when all the earthy ingredients are removed by acids, the form of the bone remains as perfect, and the mass of animal matter is almost as firm, as in a recent bone subjected to similar treatment. It would be rash, however, to infer confidently from such data that these quadrupeds were mired at periods more modern than the fossil elephants found imbedded in similar clayey deposits in Europe, for the climate prevailing in this part of America may possibly have been colder than it was on the eastern side of the Atlantic. At the same time, I have stated in my former "Trav els,"* that all the mastodons whose geological position I was able to examine into, in Canada and the United States, lived subsequently to the period of erratic blocks, and the formations commonly called glacial. I have also shown that the contempo rary fresh- water and land shells were of such species as now live in the same region, so that the climate could scarcely have differed very materially from that now prevailing in the same latitudes. During my stay at Boston, as I was returning one evening through Washington-street, I fell in with a noisy rabble of young men and boys, some of whom were dressed up for the occasion in rags, and provided with drums, sticks, whistles, tin-kettles, and pans, with other musical instruments, most of them on foot, but some mounted arid sitting with their faces toward the horse's Gl ass's tail, others with banners, calling out, " Hurrah for Texas," for they styled themselves "the Texas volunteers." This I found was an anti-war demonstration, and shows that there is a portion even of the humblest class here, who are inclined to turn the agressive spirit and thirst for conquest of the Washington Cabinet into ridicule. June 1. — Sailed for England in the Britannia, one of the Cunard line of steamers, the same in which we had made our outward voyage. For several days a white fog had been setting in from the sea at Boston, and we were therefore not surprised to find the mist so dense off the harbor of Halifax that the light- * Vol. i. pp. 51, 55. Vol. ii. p. 65. VOYAGE TO HALIFAX. [CHAP. XL. house was invisible. By a continual discharge of guns, which were answered by the firing of cannon at the light-house, our captain was able safely to steer his ship into the harbor. In the post office we found letters from England, left by a steamer which had touched there two days before, and had come from Liverpool in nine days. June 7. — When wo had quitted Halifax five days, and were on the wide ocean, the monotony of the scene was suddenly broken by the approach of a group of icebergs, several hundred in number, varying in height from 100 to 250 feet, all of the purest white, except such portions as, being in shade, assumed a greenish hue, or such as acquired a delicate rose-color tint from the rays of the evening sun. These splendid bergs were supposed to have floated from Placentia Bay, in Newfoundland, where a great many merchantmen had been imprisoned for several months by a huge barrier of ice. They were almost all of picturesque shapes, and some of them of most fantastic form ; three in par ticular, which came within a mile of us. One presented a huge dome, rising from the center of a flat tabular mass ; another, more than 100 feet high, was precisely in the form of a pyramid, quite sharp at the top, and the angle formed by the meeting of two sides, very well defined ; at the base of it rose a hummock, which we called the Egyptian Sphinx. The third was covered Avith pinnacles, and seemed like a portion of the Glacier des Bossons, in the valley of Chamouni, detached and afloat Kreet on one side of it stood an isolated obelisk of ice, 100 feet high, which increased A^ery slightly in size toward the base. Some of these bodies appeared to the north, others far to the south of us, the loftiest of the whole rising out of the water to the height of •!00 feet, according to the conjecture of the seamen, Avho thought they could not be far out in their estimate, as there Avas a schooner alongside of it, and they could tell the height of her mast Avithin a few feet. We sailed within half a mile of several bergs, Avhich were :2T)0 feet, and within a quarter of a mile of one 150 feet in height, on which, by aid of the telescope, AVC distinctly observed a great number of sea-birds, which looked like minute black specks on a white ground. I Avas most anxious to ascertain whether CHAP. XL.] ICEBERGS. 273 there was any mud, stones, or fragments of rock on any one of these floating masses, but after examining about forty of them without perceiving any signs of foreign matter, I left the deck when it was growing dusk. My questions had excited the curiosity of the captain and officers of the ship, who assured me they had never seen any stones on a berg, observing, at the same time, that they had always been so eager to get out of their way, and in such a state of anxiety when near them, that such objects might easily have been overlooked. I had scarcely gone below ten minutes, when one of the passengers came to tell me that the captain had seen a black mass as large as a boat on an iceberg, about 150 feet high, which was very near. By aid of a glass, it was made out distinctly to be a space about nine feet square covered with black stones. The base of the berg on the side toward the steamer was GOO feet long, and from the dark spot to the water's edge, there was a stripe of soiled ice, as if the water streaming down a slope, as the ice melted, had carried mud suspended in it. In the soiled channel were seen two blocks, each about the size of a man's head. Although I re turned instantly to the deck when the berg was still in sight, such was then the haziness of the air, and the rapidity of our motion, that the dark spot was no longer discernible. Such in stances of the transportation of rocks by ice, occurrences most interesting to geologists, were first recorded by Scoresby, in the northern hemisphere ; but from the accounts given me by Sir James Ross and Dr. Joseph Hooker, they are evidently much more common in the icebergs drifted from the antarctic than from those of the arctic regions. When we were among the ice, the temperature of the water was 45° Fahrenheit. On the day before we came up with it, the passengers had already begun to look out warmer clothing, and shawls and great coats were in requisition. Occasionally we were steering among small pieces of ice, and the wheel at the helm was turned iirst one way and then another, reminding me of the dangers of the Mississippi, when we were avoiding the bumping against logs. In the fore part of the vessel the watch was trebled, some aloft and others below, and we went on at the M* 274 AURORA BOREALIS. [CHAP. XL. rate of nine miles an hour, and once in the night came within less than a ship's length of a large berg. A naval officer on board declared to me next morning that the peril had been im minent ; that he had weathered a typhoon in the Chinese seas, and would rather brave another than sail so fast in the night through a pack of icebergs. He now thought it most probable that the President steam-ship had been lost by striking a berg. He reminded me that we had seen a pinnacle of ice, distant 100 yards or more from the main body of a berg, of which it was evidently a part, the intervening submerged ice being concealed under water. How easily, therefore, might we have struck against similar hidden masses, where no such projecting pinnacle remained to warn us of our danger. At half-past nine o'clock on the evening of the 8th June, it being bright moonlight, some hours after we had lost sight of the ice, when we were in a latitude corresponding to the south of France, we saw in the north a most brilliant exhibition of the Aurora Borealis ; the sky seemed to open and close, emitting, for a short period, silvery streams of light like comets' tails, and then a large space became overspread with a most delicate roseate hue. The occurrence of this phenomenon in the summer season, and in so southern a latitude, seemed to point to its con nection with the ice which was drifting over the sea between us and Newfoundland, now to the N. W. of us. We learn from Sir James Ross's narrative of the late antarctic expedition, the highly interesting fact, that when the Aurora Borealis was playing over the great barrier of coast ice on the shores of the antarctic land, it partook distinctly of the irregular and broken shape of the icy cliffs over which it hovered.* June 12. — A pilot came on board from Ireland, with English newspapers, filled with debates on the repeal of the corn-laws. Among the foreign news, a considerable space was occupied with the affairs of France, Germany, Italy, India, China, and there was only a short paragraph or two about America, North and South. I had been traveling long enough in the New World to sympathize fully with the feelings of some of my American fellow- * Vol. ii. p. 221. 1842. CHAP. XL.] RETURN TO LIVERPOOL. 275 passengers, who were coming abroad for the first time, when they expressed their surprise at the small space which the affairs of the United States occupied even in English journals. It is a lesson which every traveler has to learn when he is far from home, and seeks in a foreign newspaper to gain some intelligence of his native land. He is soon accustomed to find that day after day even the name of his country is not mentioned. The speed of our steamer had been constantly increasing as the weight of coal diminished. The length of the voyage, therefore, to America might be considerably abridged if the quantity of coal were lessened by a day and a half's consumption, the steamer starting from the west of Ireland, to which passengers might be conveyed in a few hours, by steamboat and railway, from Liv erpool. June 13, Saturday. — Anchored off Liverpool at half-past ten o'clock in the evening, having made the passage from Boston in twelve days and a half, it being nine months and nine days since we left that port. INDEX. INDEX. ABOLITIONIST " wrecker," ii 39. Abolitionists, i. 239, 240 ; ii. 127. , colored, i. 103, 104. Absenteeism in Southern States, ii. 70. Acquia Creek, ii. 247. Actors in steamer, ii. 165. Advocates and attorneys, i. 46. African Tom, i. 266. Age of delta of Mississippi, ii. 189. Agelaius phaeniceus, i. 245. Alabama geology, ii. 75. , traveling bad, ii. 70. , coal-field, ii. 69. Altamaha River, i. 243., 256. Albany, excursion to, ii. 259. Alcaeus, ii. 103. Alleghany Mountains, ii. 240. Alligators, i. 237, 250 ; ii. 156. Alligator's nest, i. 251. Alluvium of Missippi, ii. 183. Alpine plants, i. 69. American oratory, i. 142. Antarctic ice, i. 37. Anthracite coal, i. 188. Anti-British antipathies, ii. 217. Anti-Corn-Law-League, ii. 170. Anti-English feeling, i. 225. Anti-negro feeling, ii. 125. Anti-renters, N. Y., ii. 260. Arbitration, i. 198. Arctic Flora on Mount Washington, i, 69. Arisaig, i. 108. Artesian wells, ii. 76. , near Montgomery, ii. 41. Arundo phragmitis, ii. 118. Ateuchus volvens, ii. 245. Attakapas, ii. 136. Audubon, Mr., visit to, ii. 249. Augusta, in Maine, i. 44. Aurora Borealis, ii. 274. B. B achraan, Dr., i. 227. Backwoods, inconveniences of, ii. 62. Bald region of Mount Washington, i. Balize, ii. 113, 116, , houses on piles, ii. 117. look-out, ii. 117. Bankruptcies, i. 127. Baptist and Atheist, i. 140. and Methodists, i. 269. Barn moved, i. 100. Bartram, i. 250, 261 ; ii. 137. Basking shark, i. 118. Baton Rouge, ii. 99, 137. Battle-ground, New Orleans, ii. 122. Bayou Liere, ii. 114. la Fourche, ii. 136. Plaquemine, ii. 136. Sara, ii. 147. St. John, ii. 177. Bear in New England, i. 60. Beaufort, i. 230. Beetle, ball-rolling, ii. 245. Beetles called bugs, ii. 158. Bequests, i. 155. Berkeley, Sir William, i. 161. Bibles distributed, i. 271. Big Black River, ii. 160. Bone Lick, ii. 194. Birds, i. 236. on Mount Washington, i. 67. of Indiana, ii. 202. Bishop of St. Asaph, i. 28. Black Baptist church, ii. 14. mechanics, i. 267. Methodist church, ii. 213. Blanco White, i. 184. Blind asylum, i. 133. Blocks of granite and gneiss, ii. 27. Bluff of St. Stephen's, ii. 77. Bluffs, fossils of, ii. 4d. , shipping cotton at, ii. 47. Bonaventure, i. 238. Bony pike used for manure, ii. 246. Boot factory, i. 91. Boston, i. 24, 122. , public buildings, i. 27. , militia, i. 28. , environs of, i. 30. , suburbs of, i. 93. , lodgings in, i. 122. . mode of living, i. 124. 278 INDEX. Boulders, i. 87. Bowie knives, ii. 206. Brazilian caves, i. 259. Bridgeport, repudiation, ii. 242. Bringier, Mr., ii. 109, 175. British aggrandizement, i. 194. Brown, Mr. A., ii. 191. Brumby, Mr., professor of chemistry, ii. 69. Brunswick Canal, i. 258. Buffalo Island, ii. 179. Bunker Hill monument, i. 24. Buried trees, ii. 109, 137, 140, 147. Butler's Island, i. 248. Cabbage-palm, i. 235 Cairo on the Ohio, ii. 201. Campbell, life of, i. 116. , Gertrude of Wyoming, ii. 240. Canadian legislature, i. 198. Canadians, ii. 124. Canal cut through the ice, i. 25. Canes on bank of river, ii. 68. Cannon's Point, i. 252. Cape Cod, i. 94. Capitol, i. 200. Captains of steamers, ii. 170. Caravel of Columbus, i. 13. Carlyle, Mr., ii. 236. Carnival, ii. 91. at New Orleans, ii. 91. Carolina, North, i. 218. Carpenter, Dr., ii. 106, 111, 138, 188. Carriages, i. 125. Carthage Crevasse, ii. 132. Carver Governor, i. 99. Carya aquatica, ii. 114. Cass, General, i. 197. Cathedral, Catholic, New Orleans, ii. 93. Cattle, Miring of, ii. 86. Cercis canadensis, ii. 153. Chamaerops adansonia, ii. 107. — palmetto, i. 235. Chambersburg, ii. 241. Channing, Dr., i. 135, 152. on Milton, i. 157. on Slavery, i. 241. Channing's Works, i. 138. Charleston, i. 221. , gardens, i. 229. , society in, i. 223. Charlevoix, ii. 119. Charlottesville, ii. 135. Chatahoochie, Fall of, ii. 35. Cheapness of books in the U. S-, ii. 252. Cheirotherium of Saxony, ii. 232. in coal of Pennsylvania, ii. 230. Cherokee rose, ii. 153. Chicken-thieves, ii. 131. Children, spoilt, ii. 168. Christians, sect so called, i. 136. Christinas Day, i. 220. Christians, i. 136. Churches in Maine,!. 54. in New York, i. 181. , none in New Harmony, ii. 204. Cincinnati, progress of, ii. 218. Civilization among negroes, i. 268. Claiborne, fossil remains at, ii. 53. , landing at, ii. 53. Clapp, Dr., ii. 208. Clay, Mr., ii. 103. Clergy, pay of, i. 174. Climate of Boston i. ] 23. , change of, affecting plants, i. 72. of New England, i. 123. Clipper Steamer, ii. 223. Coal-fields, i. 215. of Alabama, ii. 69. seams, i. 213. strata, foot-prints of reptiles in. ii. 231. , vegetable structure,!. 214. measures, origin of, ii. 185. Cobblers, i. 100. Cockburn, Admiral, i. 266. Cocoa-grass, ii. 122. Cogswell, Mr., ii. 250. Cold, indifference to, ii. 21. Colored race, exclusiveness of whites toward, ii. 52. Colored servants, i. 201. domestics, ii. 72. Coluber constrictor, i. 112. Columbus, ii. 35. Competition of negro and white me chanics, ii. 36. Complaint of the Captive, ii. 103. Concord, town of, i. 90. Congregationalists, i. 164. Consumption, common in Maine, i. 57. Converts to Rome, i. 183. Coolies in W. Indies, i. 21. Copyright, international, ii. 253. Coral reef, fossil, ii. 208. Cottagers of Glenburme, ii. 168. Cotting, Dr. J. Jd., ii. 27. Cotton, ii. 130. Cotton-wood, ii. 149, 176. Cotton Mather on Day of Doom, i. 49. Couper, Mr. Hamilton, i. 244. Couthoy, Captain, i. 17. Cowley, i. 157. INDEX. 279 Crackers, i. 244. Creeds, variations in, i. 166. Creek Indians, departure of, ii. 35. Creole ladies, ii. 93. Crescent city, ii. 106. Cretaceous strata near Montgomery, ii. 41. Crevasses, ii. 106. Crimes among negroes, i. 266. Croton water, ii. 250. water- works, i. 180. Cupressus disticha, i. 327; ii. 191. Curfew at Montgomery, ii. 42. Currents, oceanic, i. 17. Custom-house officers, i. 26. Cyperus hydra, ii. 122. Cypress trees, i. 244. roots, ii. 185. knees, ii. 139. deciduous, age of, ii. 191. I). Dana, i. 153. Darby on mud of Red River, ii. 192. Darien, i. 243; ii. 13. Darwin, Mr , i. 38, 258, 260. , Pampean formation, i. 258. Date palms, i. 253; ii. 109. Davy, Sir Humphrey, ii. 269. Dawson, J. W., i. 108. Day of Doom, poem, i. 48. De Candolle, i. 247. Declaration of Independence, i. 29. Decomposition of gneiss, ii. 28. Decoy pond, i. 100. Delta advance of, ii. 119. - , subsidence of, ii. 142. Democracy and Romanism, ii. 218. Democrats, coalition of, with slave owners, i. 82. Devil's Punch Bowl, ii. 153. Swamp, ii. 145. Dewey, Dr., sermon against war, ii. 257, Dickeson, Dr., ii. 151, 191. Diplomatists i. 203. Diron, Sieur, ii. 120. Dirt-eating, ii. 17. Dissenters' Chapels Bill, i. 167. Division of property, i. 58. Divorced man, ii. 167. Dog-wood in Virginia, ii. 244. Domestic tea, ii. 160. Donaldsonville, ii. 99, 136. Dreissena, ii. 107. Dressmakers, i. 131. at Boston, i. 132. Drift, Northern, relative age of, ii. 199. Drift-wood, ii. 133. Driver, black, i. 265. Drunkenness in Alabama, ii. 60, 77. Duelling, new law against, ii. 60. Dunbar, Mr., ii. 120. Dwarf firs, i. 67. E. Eagle, i. 233. Earthquake at New Madrid, ii. 174. Echo, mountain, i. 64. Education of ladies, 126. — , popular, ii. 237, 238. , secular, i. 148. Educational movement, i. 151. Eldon, Lord, i. 90. Election, i. 143. — at Boston, i. 143. Electoral franchise, i. 195. Electric telegraph, i. 184, 185, 186. Elliot, Dr.. i. 269. Ellis's Cliffs, ii. 149. Eloquence, inflated, i. 199. Emancipation, effects of, ii. 83. Emigrants, ii. 169. — to the West, ii. 63. Eminent preachers, i. 137. Emmons, Dr., ii. 262. Engine room, i. 19. Engine, revolutions of, i. 20 Engines, high pressure, ii. 45. English newspapers, ii. 170. — pronunciation, ii. 95. - Turn, ii. 122. Envy in a democracy, i. 84. Episcopal churches, i. 136. clergyman in steamer, ii. 73. Episcopalian asceticism, i. 139. Equality, ii. 169, 181. , social, i. 78. in society, ii. 64. Eulalie, lake, ii. 176. Evansville, Indiana, ii. 207. Everett, Mr., i. 27. on cheap literature, ii. 253. Eye-glass, ii. 166. F. Factories, Lowell, i. 91. Fanaticism of New England, i. 78. Faneuil Hall, i. 27. Faraday, Mr., ii. 268. Fashion in the back woods, ii. 181. 280 INDEX. Fashionists, ii. 22. Faulkner, Mr., ii. 143. Fausse Riviere, ii. 143. Ferry boat, i. 31. Fire, alarms of, i. 132. Fire-clays of coal, ii. 185. Fires, i. 219. at New York, i. 180. Firs, Dwarf, i. 67. First juvenile, ii. 165. Fish, fossil, i. 33. Fissures during earthquake, ii. 177. Flat boats, ii. 130, 131. Fleming, Dr., i. 118. Fletcher, Mr., ii. 180. Flint, the geographer, ii. 175. Fog off Halifax, ii. 271. Fogs, ii. 135. on river Piscataqua, i. 36. Fontania ii. 143. Food for negroes, i. 264. Forefather's Day, i. 95. Forest scenery, ii. 180. Forshey, Mr., ii. 121, 137, 156, 184. Fort Adams, ii. 149. Jackson, ii. 114. " Forty-five or fight," ii. 227. Foot-prints, fossil, of Greensburg, ii. 228. Fossil-trees, i. 212. human bone, ii. 151. remains, i. 258. Fossils in drift, i. 33. at Gardiner, i. 43. Fox, Mr., i. 202. Franconia, i. 86. Free school, i. 147. visit to a, i. 147. schools, i. 158. Free trade and protectionism, ii. 243. French Creoles, ii. 122. " French settlements," ii. 179. Fresh-water loam, ii. 149. Frost, severe at Boston, i. 24. Funeral of Northern man, ii. 23. Gale off Great Bank, i. 14. Gallatin, Mr., on Indian corn, ii. 255. • , on Oregon question, ii. 255. Gallows Hill, i. 102. Gardenia, ii. 153. Gardens at Mobile, ii. 87. Gar-fish, ii. 144. Gas, explosion of, i. 215. Gas-works, New Orleans, ii. 108. Geese, i. 100, Gelasimus, ii. 114. Gelsemium nitidum, ii. 145. General Jackson's log cabin, ii. 172. Geological epoch of White Mountains, i. 72. Geology, prejudices opposed to, ii. 236. of Georgia, ii. 18. round Portsmouth, i. 33. , Alabama, ii. 75. Georgia, Bishop of, i. 269. German baker, ii. 172. baker's wife, ii. 181. Germans in Cincinnati, ii. 218. Gertrude of Wyoming, ii. 240. Giant's Grave, i. 65. Grammer school for boys, i. 148. Gravel terraces, ii. 244. Gifford, Mr. A. F., i. 211, 217 ; ii. 245. Gist, Dr., ii. 160. Glacial grooves, i. 36. Glynn county, i. 271. Gnathodon, ii. 118. cuneatus, ii. 107. Gneiss, decomposition of, ii. 28. Goldfuss, Professor, on reptiles in coal, ii. 235. Goldsmith, Vicar of Wakefield, ii. 237. Gordonia pubescens, i. 261. Governesses, i. 223. Governor's lady, ii. 26. Grand Gulf, ii. 157. Greenland subsidence of, ii. 144, Greensburg, Pennsylvania, ii. 227. Gulf of Mexico shells, ii. 86. Gum tree, i. 247. II. Hale, Sir Mathew, i. 102. Half breeds, i. 106. Halifax, i. 22. , lighthouse, ii. 272. Hall, Captain Basil, ii. 103. , Mr. James, ii. 262. Halsydrus Pontoppidani, i. 116. Hand car on railway, ii. 18. Harlanus Americanus, i. 258. Harpers' printing establishment, ii. 250. Harrisburg, ii. 241. Hawkes, Dr., ii. 103. Hay, vessels laden with, i. 42. Hayes, Mr. J. L., i. 32, 35. Head, Sir Francis, ii. 267. Health in New England, i. 124. inU. S., i. 124. Heavenly witnesses, i. 170. Helderberg war, ii. 260. INDEX. 281 Hitchcock, Professor, i. 18. Hockmar or shark, i. 117. Hogarth's Election Feast, 172. Home, Sir Everard, 116. Hooker, Dr. Joseph, i. 38 ; ii. 273. Horticultural show, i. 27. Hospitality in South, i. 245. Hotel, St.' Louis, at New Orleans. 91. Hotels, Boston, i. 122. House of Commons, i. 199. Howe, Dr.. i. 133. Hoyt, Jesse, letters of, ii. 261 Huguenots, ii. 124. Humboldt, ii. 174. Humming-bird, migration of, ii. 247. Hunter, Mr., ii. 177. Hurst Castle, i. 94. Hydrarchos, ii. 65. Ice of Wenham Lake, ii. 268. — , antarctic, inclosing whale, i. 38. Iceberg, i. 16. Icebergs, i. 39. , rocks transported by, ii. 273. , danger of collison with, ii. 274. , drifting of, i. 18. 011 homeward voyage, ii. 273 Iberville River, ii. 136. Illegitimate children, i. 271. Immersion in baptism, i. 269. Income tax, i. 193. Independence day, i. 144. Independents, i. 168. India tree, pi'ide of. i. 219, 231. Indian blood, ii. 169. carvings of foot-prints, ii. 234. mound, Wheeling, ii. 224. mounds, ii. 15. mounds near Macon, ii. 22. corn, uncertain crop, ii. 64. shell mound, i. 252. Indiana, fossil erect trees in coal strata, ii. 205. Inflated oratory, ii. 99. Initial letters, i, 142. Inns of Southern States, ii. 57. Inquisitiveness, ii. 167. Inundations, ii. 132. Ipswich, i. 126. Irish repeal meeting, i. 146, 147. voters, i. 189. servants, ii. 98. emigrants, i. 145, 146. Island Eighty four, ii. 164. Jackson, ii. 159. , hotel at, ii. 160. , Dr. John, ii. 270. Jealousy of wealth, ii. 61. Jefferson College, ii. 134. Jeffrey, Lord, works reprinted in U. S. ii. 226. Johnson on Milton, i. 157. Judas-tree, ii. 153. Judges at Tuscaloosa, ii. 74. cashiered, ii. 101. elected, ii. 162. Julian calendar, i. 172. Juniata River, ii. 240. K. Kean, Mr. and Mrs., ii. 95. , Mrs., ii. 165. Kendall, Captain, i. 38. Kenebec river, i. 42. King, Dr., on fossil footprints in coal strata, ii. 229. Kingfisher, i. 247. Koch, i. 107. L. Ladies, educated, i. 126. ' ordinary, ii. 96. Laing, Malcolm, i. 115, 116. Lake Solitude, ii. 143, 144. Pontchartrain, ii. 90, 106, 107. Concordia, ii. 155. Eulalie, ii. 176. Lalaurie, Madame, ii. 127. Land tortoises, ii. 220. — quadrupeds, chiefly nocturnal) ii. 250. crabs, ii. 114. Landed proprietors, i. 58. Landslip, ii. 141. Language, i. 128 — , peculiarities of, i. 128, 129. Laura Bridgeman, i. 133. Law against black mechanics, ii. 81. Lay teachers, i. 173. Le Conte, Dr.. i. 237. Lectures, i. 153. Leg "bitten off," ii. 167. Legal profession, i. 45. Legislators, paid, i. 84. Legislature of Louisiana, ii. 99. Lending libraries, i. 154. 282 INDEX. Lepidosteus, ii. 144. Levee, New Orleans, ii. 105. Levees, artificial, ii. 133. Leveling up and down, ii. 169. Leyden Street, i. 96. Liberia, ii. 241. Liebig, i. 247. Lightning, i. 236. Lighthouse, Halifax, guns fired at, ii. 272. Lighthouse near Mobile, ii. 84. Lightwood, i. 220. Lignite, ii. 176. Linnaea borealis, i. 64. Literary clerk of Steamer, ii. 147. tastes, i. 130. Little Prairie, ii. 174. Live oaks, i. 238. Liverpool, landing at, ii. 275. , voyage from, i. 13. Living, cost of at Boston, i. 131. Loam, ii. 171. or loess, ii. 159. Loblolly pine, i. 236. Loess, ii. 150. Long Island Railway, ii. 265. Louisiana, ii. 123. , loess of, ii. 192. Louisville, Kentucky, ii, 210 Love, Mr., ii. 178. Lowell Factories, i. 91. Loxia cardinalis, i. 247: Luxury of New Orleans, ii. 100. Luzenberger, Dr., i. 251. Lynch Law in Florida, ii. 31. M. Maoaulay'sHistory.saleof, in U.S., ii.252. Maclarty, Mrs., ii. 168. Macon, Georgia, ii. 22. — , Alabama, ii. 58. M'Connell, i. 147. M'Cormac, Dr., ii. 106. Madam, use of term, i. 129. M'llvaine, Mr. William, i. 113. Mackenzie letters, ii. 261. Maclean, Rev. Donald, i. 117. M'Quhae, Captain, i. 120. Magnolia steamer, ii. 129, 158. Mai, Cardinal, i. 171. Mallotus, i. 33. Mammoth ravine, ii. 151. Man shot in a brawl, ii. 31. Manchester, i. 91. Manners, familliar, ii. 166. Marriage between colored and white, ii. 215. Marriages in Boston, i. 127. , early, i. 127. Marine shells, i. 94. Market at New Orleans, ii. 104. Marsh blackbird, i. 245. Martineau, Miss, ii. 127. Martins killed by storm, i. 36. Mastodon, skeletons of, ii. 269. , food of, ii. 270. Maximilian, Prince, ii. 203. Mayflower, i. 95. , table of, i. 98. Medical students, ii. 211. Megatherium, i. 258. Melville, Dr., i. 119. Memphis, ii. 171. Mendicity, i. 255. Merigomish, i. 108. Merrimack River, i. 91. Metairie ridge, ii. 108. Methodist church, black, ii. 213. prayer meetings, i. 270. church, Montgomery, ii. 213. sermon, i. 88. Mexico, war with, ii. 256. Michaud on the age of cypress, ii. 191. Migration of plants, i. 70. Mill Creek, geology of, ii. 219. Milledgeville, ii. 25. Millerite Movement, i. 75. Mississsipi, banks of, ii. 163. River, ii. 105. water, ii. 158. coast, ii. 129. bank caving in, ii. 173. delta of, ii. 183. sediment, ii. 121. age of delta, ii. 187. Missouri, slavery in, ii. 182. Mixture of races, i. 271. Mob of Gentlemen, i. 222. Mobile built on bed of shells, ii. 86. , gardens at, ii. 87. Mocking birds, ii. 181. Montgomery, journey to, ii. 37, 41. Mormons, i. 77. — and Stephanists, ii. 51. Morals of Puritans, i. 127. Morlot on Subsidence in Adriatic, ii. 187. Morse, i. 186. Geography, ii. 251. Moss, Spanish, i. 220. Mount Auburn, i. 135. Vernon, ii. 200. Washington, i. 66. Mountains of New Hampshire, i. 59. Movers" to Texas, ii. 55, 88. Mud cracks, casts of, ii. 231. INDEX. 283 Mulattoes, i. 271. Museum, Salem, i. 99. Musk rats, ii. 179. , habitations of, ii. 240. Musquitoes, ii. 97, 136. N. Nahant, i. 113. Napoleon ii. 164. Natchez, country houses* ii. 153. , ii. 149. , tornado, ii. 152. National fair at Washington, ii. 242. Nativism, i. 190. Naval arsenal, ii. 171. Names of Negroes, i. 263. Negro Baptists, ii. 14. brain, i. 105. houses, i. 249, 263. — episcopal clergyman, ii. 243. prayer, ii. 15. hospital, i. 264. slaves, ii. 34. children, ii. 24. maid servants, i. 255. names, i. 263. porters, i. 243, preacher, Louisville, ii. 214. intelligence, ii. 16. and white mechanics, ii. 36. • shot by an overseer, ii. 78. instruction, i. 208. mistaken for white, ii. 165. Negroes, i. 224. , civilization of, ii. 80. , emancipation of, i. 21. , increase of, ii. 79. , in Louisana, ii. 126. , in mines, i. 216. , intelligence of, ii. 19. , kindness to, i. 210. , more progressive in upper country, ii. 19. on sale, ii. 125. , position of, in the South, ii. 82. , prejudice against, i. 221. , progress of, i. 268 ; ii. 71. , runaway, i. 221. , treatment of, ii. 78. Neill, Mr., i. 115. New Albany, ii. 208. New Harmony, ii. 202. New Jersey, i. 191. New London, ii. 265. New Madrid, ii. 172. , departure from, ii. 200. earthquake, ii. 174. New Orleans, French appearance of, ii. )0. -, Hotel St. Louis, ii. 91. -, Catholic cathedral, ii. 93. -, theaters, ii. 95. -, tombs at, ii. 96. — , shops at, ii. 96. -, Ladies' ordinary, ii. 96. — , procession at, ii. 96. , Salubrity of, ii. 97. Newberne, i. 259. Newfoundland, i. 19. New Haven, i. 179. Newman, Mr., i. 183. Newsboys, ii. 40. Newspaper press, ii. 41. Newspapers, i. 55. — , distribution of, i. 26. • , from England, ii. 170. New York, gay dresses in, ii. 248. — , omnibuses in, ii. 249. — , naming of streets, ii. 249. Nicol, Mr. J., ii. 189. North and South split, i. 270. Northern prices, ii. 98. Norton, Mr., i. 137. Nothingarians, i. 139. Novels, sale of by Newsboys, ii. 41. Nuttall, i. 259. O. Oak,es,Mr. William, i. 64; ii. 266. Obion, ii. 180. Observatory, Cincinati, ii. 220. Ocmulgee River, i. 256 ; ii. 23. Oconee River, i. 256. Oglethorpe, i. 253. " Old Virginia," i. 268. Omnibuses in New York, ii. 249. Oolitic coal, i. 212. Opossum, ii. 17. Oregon ii. 170. , war about, i. 232. Organic remains in ice, i. 37. Oscillation of level, ii. 198. Ostracism of wealth, i. 82. Owen, Professor, i. 44. , Mr., i. 105. , Robert, of Lanark, ii. 203. Oxenstiern, i. 86. Oysters, i. 233. P. Pacific, whale fishery in, ii. 265. Palenque, i. 202. 284 INDEX. Palisades, i. 191. Palmetto, i. 235. Parker, Theodore, i. 184. Patent Office, i. 201. Pauperism, absence of, i. 145. Peace Association, i. 28. Pearl River fossils, ii. 160. Peltier, i. 227. Peltries, ii. 179. Pemigewasset River, i. 87, 88. Pendlefcon, Capt. Benj., i. 37. Pere Antoine, ii. 110. Perkins, Colonel, i. 97, 112. Peytona steamer, ii. 157. Philadelphia, ii. 241. Physical science, i. 169. Pilgrim relics, i. 96. Pilgrim fathers, names of, i. 95. Pilots, ii. 118, 173. Pine-trees, age of, ii. 37. Pine-barrens want of elbow-room in, ii. 21. Pinus taeda, i. 237. Piscataqua River, i. 36. Pittsburg, fire at, ii. 225. Place-hunter, disappointed, ii. 31. Placentia Bay, ii. 272. Planters, i. 245, 261. Plants, i. 53. Alpine, i. 69. at New Orleans, ii. 107. in Virginia, ii. 244. migrations of, i. 70. near Saratoga, ii. 263. spring flowers of Indiana, ii. 203. wild, N. Hampshire, i. 34. Plassy, ii. 122. Pledges at elections, i. 85. Plymouth Beach, i. 94. , Massachusetts, i. 93. • , New Hampshire, i. 86. Politics in Massachusetts, i. 143. Polk, i.202. Pontoppidan, i. 110. Popular education, i. 155; ii. 237. • instruction, i. 175. Populus angulata, ii. 149, 176. Pork merchant, ii. 207. Porpoises, i. 15. Person, i. 170. Port Hudson, ii. 129, 137, 180. Portland in Maine, i. 41, 46. Portsmouth, N. Hampshire, i. 32. Post-office abuses, i. 90. Potter, Bishop, i. 91. Preachers, eminent, i. 137. Prejudices opposed to geology, ii. 236. Preston, Mr., ii. 135. Primogeniture, opinion of, i. 58. Proclamation of Thanksgiving Day, i. 144. Procession at New Orleans, ii. 96. Protectionist doctrines, i. 127. Protracted meetings at Montgomery, ii. 43. | Pond, Mr., ii. 35. i Powers the sculptoi', ii. 222. ! Public meetings, want of, i. 143. Purgstall, Countess, ii. 103. Puritans, i. 47, 127. a. Quadroons, ii. 94, 165. Quadrupeds, extinction of, i. 259. Quicksand, Plymouth, i. 95. Q,uincy, i. 93. R, Races, mixture of, i. 271. Raccourci cut-off, ii. 148. Railway cars, i. 30; ii. 38. traveling, i. 31. Railways, i. 178. in U. S., ii. 264. i Rattle-snakes, i. 228. Ravine near Milledgeville, ii. 29. Ravines, modern, ii. 28. Recruiting in U. S., facility of, ii. 257. Red-bird, i. 247. Red maple, ii. 145. Red River, red mud of, ii. 149, 192. Redfield, Mr., i. 17. Reelfoot, ii. 180. Relics, authenticity of, i. 98. Religion and politics, i. 140. , progress in, i. 162. Religious toleration, i. 47. Rennie, Mr. G-., ii. 189. Repeal of English corn laws, ii. 32. meeting, i. 146. Reptile, fossil, air-breathing, in coal strata, ii. 234. Repudiation, i. 193. Revival at Bethlehem, i. 73 ; ii. 16. Rice plantations, i. 262. Richmond, i. 205. coal-field, i. 211. Riddell, Dr.. ii. 107. — , on sediment of Mississipi, ii. 187. Rise of Sweden, ii. 194. River- fogs, ii. 113, 114. Robin drunk with berries, ii. 55. Robinson, Pastor, i. 162. INDEX. 285 Rogers, Prof. W. B., i. 206, 211. Roman law, ii. 98. — Catholics, i. 177. Romanism and democracy, ii. 218. Ross, Sir James, i. 17, 39 ; ii. 273. Rotation of trees, i. 246. Ruggles, Mr.: ii. 188. S. Saco, valley of the, i. 63. Sailing, rate of, i. 20. Salem Museum, i. 100. Salt marshes, i. 249. Salubrity of New Orleans, ii. 97. San Francisco, ii. 265. Sand-bursts, ii. 176. Saratoga, plants near, ii. 263. Savage, Mr., i. 99. Savannah, i. 234 ; ii. 13. Schlegel, A. W., Prof., ii. 213. Schools, common, i. 54. iu New York, i. 187. Scoliophys atlanticus, i. 112. Sea-serpent, Norwegian, i. 107, 108, 113. — , Cape Ann, i. 111. Section, geological, from Darien to Vicksburg, ii. 196. Sects, equality of, i. 47. Secular education, i. 188. Sellick, Captain, ii. 139. Sensitiveness, American, i. 131. Servants, i. 125, 263 ; ii. 167. , position of, i. 81. , scarcity of, ii. 227. Shark, basking, i. 118. Shells, i. 254. on shore of Gulf of Mexico, ii. 85. Shell-road, ii. 107. Shepard, Professor, i. 229. Shock of earthquake, ii. 178. Shops at New Orleans, ii. 96. Shrike, i. 247. Sidell on Mississippi, ii. 189. Silicified shells and corals, ii. 24. Silliman, Professor, i. 179. Sink-holes, ii. 175. Skiddaway, i. 234. Slave, marriage of, with white, Ken tucky, ii. 216. Slave labor, i. 207 ; ii. 72. States, i. 231. dealers, i. 209. whip, i. 265. , runaway, ii. 38. Slaves, sale of, Macon, ii. 59. Belling at Montgomery, ii. 42. Slave-trade, i. 232 ; ii. 241. Slave-dealer on steamer, ii. 90. Slavery, i. 241, 261. — , in Southern States, ii. 79. — , party against extension, i. 143. Smith Sydney, ii. 15. Smoke, absence of, i. 188. Snag-boats, ii. 133. Snake and dog, ii. 245. Snapping turtle, ii. 156. Soap, home made, ii. 26. Social equality, i. 80. Southern steamboat, ii. 44. planters' superior political tact, i. 81. Spanish moss, i. 243 ; ii. 104. Species, creation of, i. 228. Specific centers, theory of i. 71. Spiritual boulanger, i. 270. Split north and south, i. 270, Spoilt children, ii. 168. Squalus maximus, i. 116. Squirrels, i. 227. Stage-coach, ii. 239. from Macon to Columbus, ii. 35. Stage-traveling, ii. 24. j State debts, ii. 56. education, i. 148. Statehouse at Jackson, ii. 161. Steamboats, ii. 46. Steamboat passengers, ii. 49. collision with trees, ii. 48. accidents, ii. 111. Steamer in Maine, i. 41. Steamer to Tuscaloosa, ii. 67. Steamers safest in storms, i. 14. Steam ships, ii. 105. Stephanists, ii. 50. Stewardess, German, ii. 50. Storer, Dr., on fish, i. 156. Story, Judge, i. 22. Stoves, i. 178. Stronsa animal, i. 115. St. Charles Hotel, New Orleans, ii. 105. St. Francis River, ii. 174. St. Mary's Hall, i. 192. St. Rosalie, ii. 154. St. Simon's Island, i. 252, 253. Submarine forest, i. 34. Subsidence of Delta of Mississippi, ii. 142. Subsidence of land, i. 33. Sumner, Mr. Charles, i. 28. Sunday schools for negroes, ii. 215. Supreme Court, i. 20. Courts, i. 46. Swallows at Portsmouth, i. 35. Swamp rabbit, i. 228. 286 INDEX. Swamps of Mississipi, ii. 184. Sweden, rise of, ii. 194. T. Tabernacle at Boston, i. 76. Taconic system of rocks, age of, ii. 263. Tapir, fossil, in Texas, ii. 197. Tariff; i. 192. Tasso, love and madness, ii. 102. Taxodium distichum, ii. 148. Teachers, pay of, i. 149. , position of, i. 150. , their social position, i. 150. Telescope, i. 156 Temperance hotel, i. 54. hotels, i. 122. Ten Hour Bill, ii. 225. Tennessee, ii. 180. Terraces, succession of, i. 257. , of gravel, ii. 224. Texas, i. 196. Texas, fossil bones in, ii. 197. Volunteers, ii. 271. Thanksgiving day, i. 144. Theater at New Orleans, ii. 95. in Boston, i. 153. Theological discussion, i. 89. colleges, i. 174. Thermometer low at Tuscaloosa, ii. 84. Third House, thanks, voted to, at Albany, ii. 260. Three Heavenly Witnesses, i. 170. Tillandsia, i. 243 ; ii. 104. usneoides, i. 220. Timber trade, i. 42. Tobacco, chewing of, ii. 266. Tombeckbee River, ii. 68. Tombs at New Orleans, ii. 96. Tortoises, i. 229. , land, ii. 220. Tractarians, i. 183. Trapper, ii. 179. Traveling roads, bad, ii. 70. , rough, ii. 35. — , New England, rate of, i. 41. Trees, rotation of, i. 246. on banks of Kennebec, i. 43. and plants, i. 63. on banks of river, ii. 41. .fossil, erect, of coal, Indiana, ii. 204. Trinity Church, i. 182. Turkey buzzards, i. 229. Tuscaloosa judges, ii. 75. , acquaintances at, ii. 73. , college of ii. 68. , churches at, ii. 73. V. Unio spinosus, i. 248. Unitarian Church, i. 47. congregations, i. 136. Unitarians, i. 136. , cause of their influence, ii. 258. Universal suffrage, i. 85. University at Louisville, ii. 211. Upotoy Creek, ii. 35. V. Vanessa atalanta, ii. 220. Vegetation near Tuscaloosa, ii.69. of Gulf of Mexico, ii. 84. of Mount Washington, i. 66. Vicksburg, ii. 159, 163. Vidalia, ii. 155. Vine, cultivation of, ii. 221. Virginia, i. 206. Vitreous tubes at Areola, ii. 76. Vote by ballot, ii. 162. Voters, bribery of, ii. 16. Voyage from Mobile to New Orleans, ii. 88. Voyage to Mobile, ii. 66. W. Wailes, Colonel, ii. 151. Walhalla, i. 131. Wandering Jew, by Eugene Sue, ii. 253. Wandering Jew, great sale of, ii. 253. , tendency of the work, ii. 254, War, demonstration against, ii. 271. panic, i. 224. , preaching against, ii. 257. spirit abating, ii. 32. with England, i. 81, 242 ; ii. 57. with Mexico, ii. 256. Warren, Dr., ii. 270. Washington, i. 196, 200 ; ii. 150. , Mount, i. 66. Museum, i. 201. , national fair at, ii. 243. Wealth, ostracism of, i. 82. Webster, Mr., i. 141, 199. , Daniel, i. 141. Wenham Lake ice, ii. 268. West Point, ii. 169. Weymouth, East, i. 99. Whale discovered in iceberg, i. 38. fishery in Pacific, ii. 265. Wheatland, Dr., i. 100. INDEX. 287 Wheatstone, i. 186. Wheeling Indian mound, ii. 224. "Whig Caucus, i. 141. White, Blanco, i. 184. Mountains, i. 30. , age of, i. 72. , Peregrine, i. 96. Water, ii. 179. Wilde, Mr., ii. 129. , Richard Henry, ii. 98. Wilde's poetry, ii. 103. Wilkes, Captain, i. 39. Willey Slide, i. 61. "Willows on Mississippi, ii. 115. Wilmington, i. 218. Winthrop, i. 185, 196, 197, 200. Witches, i. 102. , Salem, i. 101. "Wood, cords of, ii. 135. Woodpecker boring trees, ii. 202. Woolly hair, ii. 166. Wyman, Dr., excursion with, ii. 245. Y. Yandell, Dr.; ii. 211. Yellow fever, ii. 87, 102. jessamine, ii. 145. Z. Zeuglodon, bones of, ii. 18. in Alabama, ii. 65. Zoology, i. 288. THE END.