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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44333 ***
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have
+ been preserved. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Italic text is denoted by _underscores_. Bold text is denoted by
+ =equals signs=.
+
+ On page 26 Count Fritz Thumb should possibly be Count FritzThumb.
+
+ On page 120 Indianopolis should possibly be Indianapolis.
+
+ On page 124, General How should possibly be General Howe.
+
+ A triangle symbol in the text is represented as [**triangle]
+
+
+
+
+ HESPEROTHEN;
+ NOTES FROM THE WEST:
+ A RECORD OF A
+ RAMBLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
+ IN THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1881.
+
+ BY
+ W. H. RUSSELL, LL.D.
+ BARRISTER-AT-LAW.
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+ LONDON:
+ SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+ CROWN BUILDINGS, 188 FLEET STREET.
+ 1882.
+
+ [All rights reserved.]
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific Page 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber 19
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea-Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!" 44
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Cañon 73
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of
+ Travel--A Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to
+ New York 107
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our Last Day in America 122
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home 140
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great Courtesy to
+ Strangers--Manners and Customs 151
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the Maori
+ 186
+
+
+
+
+HESPEROTHEN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific.
+
+
+_May 30th._--At an hour as to which controversy might arise, owing to
+the changes of time to which we have been subjected, the train, which
+had pulled up but seldom during the night, stopped at Deming Junction,
+where the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad "connects" with
+the Southern Pacific, on which our cars were to be "hauled" to San
+Francisco. Jefferson time and San Francisco time differ two hours, so
+at one end of the station we scored 6 A.M., and at the other 8 A.M.
+The sooner one gets away from Deming in any direction the better. A
+year ago--as is usually the case hereabouts--there was not a trace of
+a town on the dry ugly plain covered with prickly acacias and "Spanish
+bayonets"; now Deming flourishes in gaming and drinking saloons,
+express offices, and all the horrors of "enterprise" in the West. The
+look-out revealed a few tents, wooden shanties, a station, at which
+workmen were running up a frame-house, ground littered with preserved
+provision tins, broken crockery, adobes and refuse of all sorts. At
+the door of one hut, swarming with flies, swung half a carcase of beef;
+two women were washing, pale-faced, but not uncheerful creatures, who
+had not a good opinion of Deming and its population. "They carry out a
+dead man a day, or used to," said one informant. The lady washerwomen
+did not quite corroborate the figure; but, remarked the chattier
+of the two, "there was a considerable shewtin' about last night!"
+To the observation of one of the party that he was "going to have a
+look about," the other lady made reply, "I guess if you dew it will
+be 'hands up' for ten cents with you." On the platform was a United
+States marshal, with a revolver stuck in his belt, but his duties were
+considered to be punitive rather than preventive. Here Mr. Chase and
+Mr. Hawley left us to return to Topeka. At the abschiednehmen Sir H.
+Green was affected by a proof of interest in his welfare of a touching
+character and very full of local colour; one of our friends beckoned
+to him, took him aside, and pulling out a revolver ("It is hands up!"
+thought Sir Henry), fully loaded, pressed it on his acceptance in the
+kindest manner as a useful _compagnon de voyage_. As we were not to
+stay at Deming, the self-sacrifice was not consummated.
+
+The regular train having come up, our special was tacked on to it, and
+in an hour the locomotive puffed out of the depot, and sped westerly
+on its way at the rate of twenty miles an hour, across a plain some
+fifteen miles broad, bordered by jagged, irregular mountain ranges
+north and south, as dry as a bone--so dry that water for the engine
+has to be brought to the stations in tanks. A scanty growth of what
+looked like camel grass, interspersed euphorbias and cactuses of great
+height, was all that met the eye. We are approaching the great basin of
+Arizona, and are warned that much dust and great heat must be expected,
+and that the "scenery" does not improve in point of variety or verdure,
+both of which are nearly at zero. A vigorous, well-directed campaign
+against the flies in the saloon gave us comparative repose; then the
+blinds being pulled down, and the thermometer reduced to 83 deg.,
+society settled itself to study, with results indicated presently by
+a gentle _susurrus_ on the sofas. A sudden alarm, "Look at the deer!"
+There sure enough was a herd of antelopes flying over the scrub towards
+the horizon, which flickered about in the heat in a mirage of islands
+and uplifted mountain ends--so vanished.
+
+After passing Lordsburgh, a desolate spot in the desert, there appeared
+a beautiful mirage. The sand became a sheet of water, waveless and
+mirror-like, and in it we saw reflected in trenchant outline the
+mountain range beyond. "It must be water! it is water!" exclaimed an
+unbelieving director. And, lo! as he spoke the "dust devils" rose and
+danced along the face of the sea; in another minute the vision was
+gone; the dazzling sand, white, blank and dull, mocked our senses.
+This was near Stein's Pass, up which the train of nine carriages
+was climbing--"the heaviest train that has gone over yet," said the
+triumphant conductor. "But we thought we'd try it." Each waggon weighed
+30 tons. The Pass is three miles long, and we were working at a grade
+of 74 feet with a 19-inch cylinder engine.
+
+Between Pyramid Station and San Simon (_stant nomina umbrarum_--the
+names of mere shadows of stations) the western border of New Mexico
+is crossed, and we enter the great Territory of Arizona, which lies
+between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.
+
+It is bounded by New Mexico on the east, by Mexico on the south, by
+Utah and Nevada on the north and north-west, and by California in
+continuation of the western boundary. It is as large as New York,
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware together. Whom it
+belonged to first, so far as occupation constitutes possession, I
+know not; but the Spaniards owned and neglected it for more than
+three centuries before the Americans possessed it. In 1848 and 1853
+the regions now forming Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and
+Nevada were ceded by the descendants of the Spanish conquerors to
+the conquering Anglo-American. It would need weeks of assiduous
+travel to explore the portion of Arizona where the most interesting
+ruins in America, the cities of the Zoltecs or the Aztecs--for the
+experts differ respecting their origin--are to be found. The weight
+of authority and of recent investigation leads one to believe that the
+Aztecs were not the builders of these ruined cities. Humboldt, indeed,
+believed that they were; but, as Mr. Hinton remarks, in his capital
+little handbook, which I recommend to prospectors, emigrants, tourists,
+and travellers, "to suppose such an utter abandonment of settled
+habitations, it will be necessary to suppose some strange impelling
+reasons, either in climate or other causes, that must have amounted
+to a catastrophe. An hypothesis which would leave a whole race able
+to conquer an empire, and to preserve power enough to abandon without
+destruction their old homes, implies conditions and forces without
+a known historical parallel." The conclusion that many native cities
+were flourishing when the Spaniards arrived in America may, perhaps, be
+questioned. There is a distinctive character about them, differing from
+that of the Mississippi mounds, the Central American pyramids, or the
+ruined cities of Yucatan.
+
+The site of one of these cities was pointed out to us from the
+train, and that was all we saw of them. But I heard so much about
+the mysterious remains that I was induced to procure Mr. Bancroft's
+remarkable essay on the native races of the Pacific Coast. Mr. Bancroft
+believes that the Pueblos and other Indians, in a state of civilisation
+which they subsequently lost, were the earliest inhabitants of these
+countries and the builders of the cities; that the Apaches came down
+upon them, and their work being then aided by the Spaniards, this
+original agricultural people were swept off the face of the earth.
+But where the Apaches came from the American ethnologists have not,
+I believe, determined. For hundreds of miles these ruins cover the
+country--stone houses, ancient watch-towers, and adobe buildings,
+around which are quantities of stone implements, masses of crockery and
+pottery. In some places there are structures of wood and stone, without
+iron, the masonry consisting of thin plates of sandstone dressed on the
+edges, and laid in coarse mortar nearly as hard as the stone itself.
+
+The explorers who have discovered the most interesting cities in
+Arizona and elsewhere were officers of the United States army. They
+have been the true pioneers of American civilisation in the West, and
+it is most creditable to them that they have been able to furnish so
+much scientific and antiquarian observation in the execution of their
+arduous and often painful duty in Indian warfare. There is no cold
+shade cast upon the labours of officers who desire to make a little
+reputation for themselves by contributions to scientific publications,
+and by papers on natural history and the like in periodical
+publications or in the daily press.
+
+There is, as might be expected from its position, a very high
+temperature in Arizona. This lasts from the middle of June to the first
+of October. During the best part of summer exertion of any kind is
+impossible. Metal objects cannot be handled without producing blisters;
+rain scarcely ever falls; and, to keep up the drain of constant
+evaporation, a man must drink a gallon or two gallons of water a day.
+Mr. Ross Brown, speaking of the summer, declares that "everything
+dries. Waggons dry; men dry; chickens dry. There is no juice left in
+anything, living or dead, by the close of summer. Officers and soldiers
+creak as they walk; chickens hatched at the season come out of the
+shell ready cooked. Bacon is eaten with a spoon, and butter must stand
+in the sun an hour before the flies become dry enough for use. The
+Indians sit in the river with fresh mud on their heads, and, by dint of
+constant dipping and sprinkling, manage to keep from roasting, though
+they usually come out parboiled." But, although it is recorded that a
+party encamped on a narrow cañon where the temperature was 120 degrees,
+there was no sunstroke. And in that respect the climate differs from
+that on the eastern coast, where, especially this very summer, a great
+number of deaths were caused by _coup de soleil_. People, with the
+thermometer marking 94 degrees, talk of its being agreeably cold. An
+exceedingly interesting fact, if it be one, connected with residence in
+this part of the world is the wholesome effect of complete abstinence.
+Death from want of water was by no means infrequent in the old days
+before so many wells were dug; but it only occurs when there is a good
+deal of humidity in the air. Although alcoholic drinks and tobacco have
+an injurious effect, there is a large consumption of both at all the
+stations and at the mines.
+
+As in the Orange River Free State, where probably the conditions of
+temperature are not very dissimilar, pulmonary complaints are cured, so
+a residence in Arizona, it is said, stops consumption; and there are
+authentic statements that people who arrived in a rapid decline have
+experienced almost immediate relief of the principal symptoms, and have
+been finally cured. Governor Safford, in an official letter, states
+that his lungs were a good deal diseased, and that he was suffering
+with a severe cough when he reached Arizona, and that in six months his
+cough left him. He is satisfied the warm, dry atmosphere acted like a
+healing balm to diseased lungs, and that, the pores being kept open,
+the impurities which attack weak organs escape through the skin. Dr.
+Loryea, of San Francisco, and Dr. Sawyer aver that Arizona is nature's
+Turkish bath, and that Yuma, that evil-looking place, contains the
+fountains of health.
+
+Of such vast regions a small acquaintance acquired by passing rapidly
+twice over a line of railway does not entitle one to speak; but, if
+what we read and heard of Arizona be true, there is within its limits
+enormous mineral and agricultural wealth. There are carboniferous
+basins of great extent and richness. The mountains teem with ore.
+Silver and gold, copper pyrites, zinc, and lead are to be found over
+a great range, the extent of which is as yet imperfectly known. There
+are sulphates of nearly all the metals; metallic oxides, chlorides,
+carbonates, nitrates; agates, amethysts, garnets, and other precious
+stones. People there are who believe that the diamond, the emerald, and
+the ruby will turn up in due time. In fact, if one were to be guided
+by the accounts in the papers or the guide-books, he would think that
+a sure way of making an immediate fortune would be to settle down on
+any hillside in this favourite land. Nevertheless, what I saw out of my
+window gave me reason to suppose that there was poverty in Arizona as
+well as in the old country. Nor did the buildings which I saw by the
+way at the sparse stations and infrequent towns give an idea that the
+in-dwellers were well-to-do in the world. The adobe, or burnt brick,
+which is a common material in lieu of better, has always a ruinous
+appearance. The houses built of it yesterday seem tumbling to pieces
+from the influences of old age.
+
+We take no note of time save by its relation to constant motion, and
+to the "programme"--a Procrustean bed on which we have voluntarily
+placed our tortured limbs. Sometimes in the hours of the night, which
+could not be called still because of the incessant pealing, rattling,
+and thundering of the train, I thought of the wonderful ways of man
+with himself in such affairs as we were now engaged in. There is a play
+of Terence which was a trouble to me in my youth, so long ago that I
+remember very little more of it than the dismal and elongated name;
+but Mr. "Heautontimorumenos" never needlessly bound himself up in a
+programme and delivered his life over to a time-table! It is likely
+enough, seeing what sort of man he was, that he would have adopted
+that course had he lived in these days. I admit that programmes are
+necessary when your movements regulate, or have to be regulated by,
+those of other people; and that was the case in some measure with
+us, but the solicitude it occasioned the worthy and valued friends,
+whose brows I perceived becoming more puckered, and whose faces and
+spirits were heavy with cares connected with the programme, to come up
+to time, was beyond belief, and I vowed if ever I had my own way with
+the ordering of a party I would have no programme at all. And plot and
+calculate as you will, a gale of wind, or a heated axle, or a broken
+bridge, or a flood, upsets everything, and your schemes gang aglee
+utterly! It was admirable to see how we were working out the destiny
+we had made manifest for ourselves in advance so long ago, but the task
+was not easy. What curious sounds, by the way, our train made at night!
+One could now and then compose words to the tune of the wheels, and
+the regular rhythm forced one at times to hum the words of a song, of
+which the train seemed to hammer out the music. It seemed so strange to
+be turning into bed night after night, and waking up to pass the same
+life day after day, like a log of wood carried on by an interminable,
+irresistible torrent.
+
+Provided with books and newspapers, and friends to converse with, as
+well as with sights to see, we had, however, no reason to complain
+that time hung heavy on our hands as the train sped on. The books
+were very utilitarian, it is true--Reports of Chambers of Commerce,
+statistics and papers connected with railway and commercial enterprise
+and the like. But our directors took to that literature with avidity,
+and aided by maps and tables, copiously furnished to them, seemed
+bent on passing with honours in a competitive examination anent the
+American railway system. There were always, close at hand in the cars,
+competent authorities to answer questions, or able champions to engage
+in controversy, and as I heard all the subtle contentions, which I did
+not understand, concerning signalling and baggage checking, gauges and
+engines, curves and gradients, freights and fares, I was set to think
+what the field had been in which all the ingenuity and talent displayed
+in dealing with such topics were exercised in pre-railway days. These
+discussions were mostly connected with the consideration of profits
+and percentages, and that was a neutral ground on which the combatants
+manoeuvred their facts and figures as in a natural "_schauplatz_".
+There were times when such investigations ran down like a clock,
+and no one wound them up again for a few hours, and then my friends
+digested the remains they found on the field of battle and strengthened
+themselves for friendly jousting.
+
+Not very long ago there would have been exceedingly good sporting in
+many parts of Arizona. Grizzly bears, common and black bears; pumas,
+mountain sheep, jaguars, ocelots, opossums, panthers, wolves, and
+lynxes are largely distributed over the hill ranges. There are also
+hares and rabbits and many smaller animals. Wild turkeys have much
+diminished of late years; but there is a variety of birds, some of
+them excellent for the spit. The chase, however, is attended with some
+danger, unless one is very well booted and looks out where he treads,
+as rattle-snakes abound, and are of exceeding virulence, the black
+species being especially deadly. There are horned toads, but these are
+harmless.
+
+For the botanist Arizona is an almost inexhaustible field of
+delight. Any one who likes to read of vegetable wonders, or of an
+extraordinarily varied flora, cannot do better than get Dr. Loryea's
+work, or read 'New Mexico,' by Elias Brevoort. The growth which struck
+us most was that of the extraordinary cactus called the candelabra
+or Sahuaro. It is worth while going so far as the railway will take
+one to see these plants sticking up on the sides of a rock without a
+trace of verdure or moisture, rising to the height of 40 or 50 feet,
+and throwing out enormous arms at the most grotesque angles, each
+varying from the other in shape, the number of its arms, and in the
+manner in which they are disposed. This giant cactus is covered with
+prickles, and is of a light green colour. It is said that in the old
+days the Apache Indians not unfrequently made use of them as handy
+means of torture, and nailed their victims to a cactus previous to
+setting fire to it. The body of the plant is resinous, and it can
+be easily converted into a bonfire. Here and there we saw some with
+traces of pale yellow flowers. When these are gone there is a fruit,
+which makes an excellent preserve, or can be boiled into sugar. Then
+there are prickly pears in great quantities; and there is a "negro-head
+cactus," with a round top covered with sharp spines, which furnished
+the Mexicans with fish-hooks. "There is a soul of beauty in things
+evil." If a thirsty traveller coming upon one of these plants kindles
+a fire around it, the juices of its body are gradually concentrated
+into a central cavity, where they only wait incision to be liberated
+in the form of a pleasant drink, half a gallon or more in quantity.
+The appliances for getting a drink out of most of these roots are
+described at length in various books of travel; but however useful they
+may have been at the time, the activity of the Atchison, Topeka and
+Santa Fé Railway will in all probability exempt travellers in future
+from any necessity to avail themselves of these ingenious devices.
+Trees flourish in spite of the heat and want of water. As various as
+the trees are the human inhabitants, and one of the greatest marvels
+connected with them, perhaps, is the extraordinary variety of dialects
+amongst people of the same race, who lived in the same country long
+before the white man came to trouble them. They are decreasing, of
+course, in numbers; but in some of the reservations they seem to
+have arrested downward progress, and to have taken to some form of
+agricultural labour. At present Arizona is the happy hunting-ground
+of the unfortunate red man. There is, I am assured, no disposition on
+the part of the whites to intrude upon the reservations of the various
+tribes. I did not hear of any one who had come in from the East to
+settle with the view of making his fortune by farming; but miners have
+flooded the cañons, and climbed the mountain-tops; and now they have
+settled down into a steady way of life without any big "booms," as the
+Americans say, but with prospects of pretty certain returns for their
+labour.
+
+All night we travelled on, and when the morning came, we were still
+traversing the desert, still passing through one of the most sterile
+wastes on the face of the earth, where, however, by strange contrasts
+of nature--or is it strange?--there were in the mountains and in the
+ravines rich ores to tempt the cupidity and enterprize of man. We are
+continually reminded of similar wastes in India and in Africa; but no
+one, as far as I know, has yet discovered any mineral wealth in the
+north-western deserts of our Indian Empire. And although Captain Burton
+and others have fancied they have come across an El Dorado in Southern
+Egypt, and Ibrahim Pasha had such faith in the existence of gold in
+those regions that he led forth an expedition to perish there, there
+is no such fortune in store for the adventurous miner as awaits him in
+Arizona, Colorado, and California.
+
+_June 1st._--Everyone who has entered Arizona, or left it--and let us
+hope he went back all the better for his visit--will recollect Yuma for
+ever.
+
+Yuma is on the Colorado, which divides California from Arizona.
+The muddy waters of the river rush with immense velocity past the
+buttresses of the fine bridge, with a draw for steamers, that spans
+it. The town consists apparently of adobe houses, and these not very
+regularly built. I could not visit the main street for lack of time,
+but the offshoots within eyeshot of us were not tempting. All we
+could see from the railway windows were flat-roofed adobe houses, some
+squalid Indians nearly naked, the buildings, with the Stars and Stripes
+over them, of the United States post on the left bank, and a few wooden
+sheds. It is said to be one of the hottest places in the world, and
+certainly looked dry and dusty. They say that a soldier who died there
+and went to an unmentionable place, returned in the spirit to beg for
+a blanket, as he felt so cold!
+
+More happily constituted travellers than most of us have seen something
+pleasing in the aspect of the country roundabout, and have been moved
+to much admiration by the various tints of the hills in the distance,
+and by the rocks which constitute the near limits of the valley through
+which the river passes. In the old days, when the stage-coaches offered
+the only means of travelling through the district, there might have
+been a good deal to see along the road; but the rail generally avoids
+sights, and where nature is at its best, the engineer strikes deep down
+and burrows if he can. The colours of the hills are bright and varied;
+the lava rocks are of many shades, and the sun, piercing through strata
+of pure air, illuminates them with great vividness and force; but after
+a time the eye tires of the uniform hues of the landscape. For a few
+miles the rail runs close to the river, then plunges into the most
+remorseless, cruel waste of sand and rock, spread out up to the foot of
+the rugged hills of the Barnardino Range, I ever beheld--an abomination
+of desolation compared with which the Libyan Desert or the plains of
+Scinde were the Garden of the Hesperides. I cannot describe, nor could
+I at any time hope to succeed in giving an adequate conception of this
+dreadful wilderness. For 107 miles west there is not a drop of water to
+be found; the stations are dependent on the railway for their supplies.
+But Nature, as if to take away the reproach of permitting such a vast
+blotch on her fair face, kindly threw in Fata Morgana. We saw with
+delight widespread lakes with fairy islands in the midst; placid seas
+washing the base of the distant hills. This baked and dreary expanse
+extends nearly to San Gorgonio. We were spared the sandstorms which are
+so dreadful, nor did we experience inconvenience from the dust. The
+traveller, who has begun to despair of ever seeing anything greener
+than giant cacti and the adamantine vegetation which dispenses with
+water, is agreeably surprised as he approaches Los Angeles. If he
+be as fortunate as we were in having such friends as Colonel Baker
+and his wife to take charge of him, he will be amply repaid for far
+greater discomforts than any he experienced in the Colorado desert.
+From Los Angeles there is a railway to Santa Monica, seventeen miles
+distant, which belongs to Colonel Baker; and I would advise every one
+who can, either to spare or make the time for a diversion to that
+most delightful spot. Judge of the pleasure we felt when, after a
+picturesque run through orange groves, vineyards, and fields of corn
+and barley, we gazed on the waters of the Pacific--"θαλαττα! θαλαττα!"
+What a glorious scene! the broad bay lighted by the rays of the
+declining sun; the blue waves rolling on in solemn march, and
+breaking in long lines of foam on the dazzling sand, and nearer
+still the gardens and trees of the Pacific Biarritz which was about
+to welcome us! Our palace-car and its attendant carriages shot into a
+siding close to the beach. In a few minutes "every man Jack" was off to
+the bathing establishment to conform to the regulations ere we plunged
+into the sea. It is an orthodox bathing-place of the highest order. The
+Baths are extensive, and provided with every convenience and comfort
+for ladies and invalids; hot and cold, salt water and fresh, for those
+who do not like to trust themselves to the sea. A rope extended seaward
+to hold on by was needful, for the surf was heavy and the undertow
+strong. The water was delicious. Generally there is less sea on, and it
+is never too hot or too cold for bathing. Next morning we had another
+bath in a still rougher Pacific. The Duke and some of the party were
+driven about the country by Colonel and Mrs. Baker, and at 3 P.M., to
+our sorrow, we left the most lovable little spot of all we have seen
+on this continent. Good fortune be in store for Santa Monica! At Los
+Angeles, where carriages were waiting, we drove through the streets and
+suburbs, which enabled us to appreciate the reasons which induced the
+Spanish founders to give the city its name. In the evening we continued
+our journey, passing in the dark over the feat of engineering called
+the Loop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber.
+
+
+_June 2nd._--It is astonishing how soon one gets accustomed to the
+rattle and rumble of the rail, and sleeps all the night through after
+a time, waking up only when a train stops at a station, just as a
+miller is roused by the cessation of the clock of the mill-wheel. We
+keep good hours, and so at 4.30 this morning I was looking out of the
+window at a sea of blue mountain ridges upon the west, which looked
+like the waves of the ocean, so varied in the serrated edges was the
+line of stony waves which seemed as if they were about to sweep down
+over the great stretch of prairie. We were passing through a new land
+of Goshen, at least that was the name which I detected on the station
+board, indicating a junction with another line, and early as was the
+hour the door of the hospitable restaurant was open, and gentlemen
+in front were to be seen drawing their hands across their lips as if
+they had been taking a refresher in the early morning. Close at hand
+the country was perfectly flat, covered with glorious crops nearly
+ripe for the sickle, and indeed cut and stacked in some places. Water
+appeared abundant; a river flowing west was visible at intervals, its
+course marked by a line of trees. Large black cranes stalked about in
+the meadow-like fields, and hares sat up on end to take a look at the
+train. The paucity of human beings, except at the rare stations, was
+remarkable; only when I say "rare," perhaps I am scarcely justified,
+as there were little wooden huts at intervals perhaps of ten or twelve
+miles, where a saloon announced itself, and a possible ticket-office.
+
+On the east of the plain through which the line runs, the peaks of
+the Sierra Nevada were visible, but the journey was rather monotonous
+all the same, and we were glad when our train halted at Madera, about
+ninety miles from Goshen, where we were to get out and start on our
+expedition to the Yosemite Valley. Especial arrangements had been
+made for our conveyance, but I almost doubt now whether it would not
+have been better for us to have taken the ordinary carriage which
+leaves Madera every day, except Monday, for the Yosemite Valley, at
+7.45, arriving at Clarke's or Bruce's in somewhat less than twelve
+hours, so as to bring daylight with it to the halting-place; a very
+desirable thing, as we soon found out. It was 8 o'clock before our
+party started from Madera, in two Kendal carriages with four horses
+each. In one was the Duke, Lady Green, Mr. Stephen, and myself, with
+Crockett on the box; in another were Sir Henry Green, Mr. Wright, Major
+Anderson, and Mr. Jerome. Our driver was a man with the impossible
+name of MacLenathan, a resolute, dry, taciturn man, with a good face,
+seamed with the exposure to sun and rain of many years on the box.
+But he told us he had deserted it lately, and had taken to the work
+of livery stable keeper, only coming out on this occasion as driver to
+do honour to the Duke. As it turned out, it was well his right and his
+left hand had not lost their cunning. The driver of the other carriage
+was a noted character, rejoicing in the name of "Buffalo Bill," and
+later on we had reason to feel very thankful to him also for the
+possession of great pluck and nerve. For some ten or twelve miles the
+route, which consists of mere wheel tracks over the prairie, runs over
+moderately undulating land. On the right there is a shoot or _flume_
+for carrying down timber from the upper part of the mountain ridge
+fifty miles away. The dust was troublesome, and the rapid motion of
+the four horses scarcely saved us from the roasting sun. The scenery
+was not interesting; indeed, the great object of attraction was the
+little Californian quail with his pretty crest, running across through
+the grass or jumping up upon a stump to have a look at the travellers.
+Stage stables were far apart, but the speed was fair, and it was
+astonishing to see the excellent condition in which the horses were
+at the end of their long canter, and what capital steeds were taken
+out of the stalls, in which they were feeding on barley-straw, to
+be put into the traces. I think the average length of the stages was
+about twelve miles. We lost about an hour at a little mining village
+where we halted for dinner, a place called Coarse Gold, as well as
+I recollect, consisting of the usual buildings, a few shanties, the
+store, the hotel, far better than might have been expected, and a sort
+of wigwam or one-storeyed house, in front of which were assembled a
+number of "Digger Indians," degraded specimens of a degraded tribe.
+They sat looking at the new arrivals in the most apathetic manner,
+just as they might regard so many flies. The men were dressed in a
+compromise of old Indian attire, leather leggings and deerskin jackets,
+with European clothing, caps, bad hats and trousers, and old boots,
+the women swathed ungracefully in what seemed to be pieces of blanket,
+their legs encased in folds of dirty cotton. One of these Diggers was
+very slightly dressed, and as it is intensely cold in the winter, we
+asked him whether he did not feel the effect of the frost and snow.
+He knew a little English, and made the most of it. "When your body is
+covered you do not feel the cold," he said; "But your face is always
+uncovered, and yet you do not feel the cold there. An Indian's body is
+all face." And that was all the explanation he would vouchsafe to us.
+Somehow or another, what with delays at the stations, possibly caused
+by our being out of the regular running, and being an interpolation on
+the ordinary course of travel, and possibly owing to our reduced speed,
+for the carriages with four horses did not, it seems, go as fast as
+the public conveyance with six, it was getting dark as we approached
+the line of wooded hills, in a valley in which, many miles away, lay
+our halting-place for the night. The result of our delay in starting,
+concerning which the driver had been severe from time to time, was
+startlingly manifest as the coaches mounted the steep ascents of one of
+the most tortuous roads in the world. The spurs of the hills come down
+very sharply to the valley, and the road is carried round by a series
+of very severe gradients following the contour of the mountain-chain,
+so that at one time there is a deep gorge on your left, and then, as
+the road leaves that spur with the valley on that side and crosses to
+another spur, there is a great descent on the right, so that you are
+continually passing along by a series of precipices, to which, in our
+case, the fast gathering gloom imparted additional horror. Through the
+sighing of the wind in the trees aloft came the roar of the torrents
+down below. The drivers went along at a good steady canter, and from
+time to time, as we came round a sharp curve, I dare say the thought
+was in every one's mind, what would happen if one of the leaders
+fell, or if the driver slipped his hand in gathering up the reins to
+go round the corner. The scenery became more wild and formidable, so
+to speak, at every fresh turn. The colossal trees, which challenged
+admiration in the daytime, closed up in greater volume, darkening the
+narrow road completely, so that in an hour after entering upon the
+mountain-range it became as black as pitch. The lamps of Buffalo Bill
+in the leading carriage were some guide to our driver. He had none,
+and it was with anxiety, renewed every ten minutes or so, that we saw
+the lights in front describe a graceful curve, which showed that they
+were passing by one of the dips or cuts of the road. It needed skill
+and judgment for MacLenathan to conduct the carriage, because if he
+drove too close to that in front of us, the clouds of dust obscured
+the view, and if he dropped too far behind he lost the benefit of the
+lights. By enormous trunks of trees, by piles of timber, through deep
+cuttings in the rock, plashing over watercourses, descending swiftly
+into river-beds, and splashing through the fords over boulders, then
+climbing up steep hillsides, on and on, it seemed as though the night
+would never come to an end, and we inwardly, and audibly too, expressed
+our regret that we had not started a little earlier; but still there
+was an almost pleasurable excitement in holding on as we swept round
+one of these terrible gorges, and tried to look down into the gulf
+beneath. That last stage seemed interminable, but towards 9 o'clock at
+night the driver of the coach in front announced that we were getting
+"near at last"; and lucky it was, for his lights were giving out. "It
+is just as well that they did not," said our driver, "because it would
+be bad for you." "Why?" "Well," he said, "you would just have to get
+out and walk! I would not undertake to drive any one in the dark along
+such a road as this." Presently we heard the noise of rushing water,
+and gained the bank of a stream flowing with swiftness over a shingle
+bed. This we crossed, and in half an hour more, through the dark belt
+of trees in front, lights were discerned, and, crossing another stream
+and a bridge, our wearied horses were pulled up in front of the hotel,
+a large wooden building, on the steps of which were the landlord and
+his staff, and most of the inmates turned out to greet and inspect
+the travellers who had been long expected. "It is a bad country to go
+driving about in the dark," said Mr. Bruce, the landlord, a sentiment
+in which we thoroughly agreed. There was a supper in the common
+room, to which, albeit the fare was primitive enough, we did ample
+justice. Travellers have complained of the charges along the road, but,
+considering the distance which all articles have to be carried to the
+Valley, the heavy duties, and the shortness of the season, I do not
+think that any one with experience of Swiss inns would complain much;
+and if the traveller desires to drink claret, he must not be astonished
+if he pays eight or nine shillings a bottle for it. The ordinary fare,
+at hotel prices, is quite good enough for hungry people, and eggs,
+milk, and bread are abundant, and not dear. The bedrooms, sufficiently
+simple in all their appointments, are good enough to be welcome to
+tired people, for there is a fair bed to lie upon, and the sheets, as
+far as our experience went, were clean and fresh. Nor were the insect
+horrors, of which we may have some knowledge in parts of Europe, to be
+dreaded, not even mosquitoes at this time of year.
+
+Soon after dawn a thunderstorm broke over the valley, hail and torrents
+of rain, and the landlord congratulated us upon the cooling effect
+it would have on the air, and on the absence of dust, which is rather
+troublesome at times. It was necessary to make an early start in the
+morning, for it is a long journey to the Yosemite. For some years past
+the Valley has become a kind of American Chamouni, and if Americans
+swarm over Europe in search of the sublime and beautiful, they cannot
+be accused of neglecting altogether their own country. The first thing
+I saw, on walking out on the verandah of the hotel, was the stage-coach
+and six horses, with eight ladies and nine gentlemen, loading up for
+the Valley. They had arrived late the night before, a little in advance
+of us, and yet the ladies, bravely attired for the road, were all in
+their place in the _char à bancs_ long before 7. Travellers frequently
+stay at Bruce's, and our host promises good sport to any one who will
+make it his headquarters; but I cannot speak with any confidence on
+that point myself; still I should think it a very pleasant quarter for
+a man who had nothing else to do, and who had an aptitude for climbing,
+to go about looking out big game. We heard talk of pheasants, but
+saw none: the bird which is called by that name not being entitled
+to it, according to ornithologists. In front of the hotel was laid
+out the skin of a cinnamon bear, which had been shot by an Austrian
+gentleman--"Count Fritz Thumb," the landlord called him--a few days
+previously, and which was to be sent after him as a trophy of his
+skill. "But," says Boniface, "it was not he shot him at all; it was 'is
+old Injun hunter." Grizzlies, he said, were rare, but they were to be
+found if you went up high enough, and as he spoke he pointed up to the
+mountains towering away in the distance in grand Alpine proportions.
+Deer were common enough, and there were some tame specimens of the
+ordinary black deer running about in the enclosure. We had an early
+start, but not quite so early as the Americans; and it was wonderful
+how well our four hardy horses did the first stage, six and twenty
+miles, including some very sharp ascents from the Hotel.
+
+From time to time we got out and walked up the sharp bits, diverging
+to the right or left to gather the lovely flowers which grew on
+the roadside, or halting to admire the giant trees which clothed
+the mountain ridges. Pitiable ignorance! not to know the names of
+the plants or shrubs or wonderful bunches of blossoms, among which
+fluttered the most magnificently coloured butterflies. Woodpeckers
+of many different species uttered their quaint notes in jerky flight
+from tree to tree, or peered at the travellers from the shelter of
+the branches. Firs, pines, and spruces of enormous size, and trees
+to me unknown, formed a dense forest on each side of the road; but
+now and then we caught glimpses of the stupendous ranges of the alps
+beyond. It was lamentable to see the waste and wreck wrought in this
+wondrous wealth of timber--reckless, wicked waste. Charred trunks
+stood with leafless arms withered and black, or lay prone among the
+ferns in myriads. This was, we were told, the work of shepherds, who
+think nothing of setting fire to one of the finest trees in the world
+to warm themselves for an hour, and are delighted with a conflagration
+which may lay a hillside in ashes. And the Indians too are held to
+have their share in the destruction. There was enough of timber wasted
+and destroyed mile after mile to build a city. The nemesis must come;
+already the alarm has been sounded, and the State authorities here and
+elsewhere are trying to prevent the mischief. I have often had occasion
+to regret my ignorance of botany _inter alia_; but never did I feel it
+more than when I was walking up the road, on each side of which was a
+carpet of flowers, a maze of shrubs and plants--dense brushwood--to not
+one of which could I give a name. We arrived at the Halfway House at
+12.35 as much pleased as the horses which brought us there so well at
+the respite, for it was an awful "pull up," and the coachman did his
+work at high pressure. In the course of our pilgrimage we had found a
+very pleasant _divertissement_. The Major, Mr. White, and Mr. Jerome
+had excellent voices, and from time to time they burst into song,
+giving with great effect the quaint negro melodies, which are now made
+familiar to us in London, from a very large _répertoire_; and so the
+afternoon passed in quiet enjoyment as we climbed the hills on foot or
+in the carriages--snatches of talk, exclamations of wonder and delight,
+and outbursts of the 'Golden Slipper,' 'O! that 'Possum,' 'The Ark,'
+'John Brown,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' and other choruses.
+
+It was near 4 o'clock when the driver, who had been silent for some
+time, looking round at us occasionally as one who would say, "Wait a
+little till I surprise you," suddenly pulling up, said, "Now, here you
+are. This is Fascination Point! Won't you get down a bit?" And, lo!
+there indeed lay before us a scene of indescribable grandeur. I know
+nothing like the effect produced by Yosemite Valley when seen for the
+first time from this point. It has a characteristic which no other
+similar view I am acquainted with possesses. You take in at one glance
+stupendous mountain-ranges, all but perpendicular, beyond which you see
+the snowy crests of the great Sierra, the profound valley between them,
+a long vista of extraordinary magnificence, of cascades and precipitous
+waterfalls, and far down below a silvery river rushing through a
+forest composed of the noblest trees in the world, with patches of
+emerald-green sward and bright meadows.
+
+I see that by a slip of the pen I have miscalled the place from which
+we got our first view of the wondrous scene. But I have a right to
+change the name for my own use. What the driver said was "Inspiration
+Point." I prefer my mistake, for the view inspires you with no feeling
+save that of wonder and delight. These sublime scenes appear to be
+beyond the reach of poetry. Niagara and the Yosemite have not yet
+found a laureate. The peculiar and unique feature of the valley seems
+to me to be the height and boldness of the cliffs which spring out
+from the mountain-sides like sentinels to watch and ward over the
+secrets of the gorge; next to that is the number and height of the
+waterfalls; but it is only by degrees and by comparison that the mind
+takes in the fact that the cliffs are not hundreds, but thousands
+of feet high--that these bright, flashing, fleecy cataracts fall for
+thousands of feet--that the rent which has been torn in the heart of
+the mountains, till it is closed by the awful granite portals beyond
+which no mortal may pass, extends for miles. I thought as I gazed
+that it were pity to descend, lest a nearer view might destroy the
+effect of that _coup d'oeil_; but the driver had regulated the period
+for rapture. He whipped us up to our places by word of mouth, and
+the carriages renewed their course, now striking by bold zigzags down
+into the valley for our destination, which was still six miles away. I
+shall not attempt to describe my own feelings, far less can I pretend
+to tell what others, probably far more susceptible of the beauty and
+grandeur of what we beheld than I am, may have felt at the succession
+of the awe-inspiring revelations of the tremendous grandeur of the
+Valley which came upon us. What is the use of rolling off a catalogue
+of names and figures?--even the brush of the painter, charged with
+the truest colours and guided by the finest hand and eye, could never
+do justice--that is, could never give a just idea of these cliffs and
+waterfalls. "El Capitan! Oh, that's the name, is it? Three thousand
+three hundred feet high!" And then you try to take in what that means.
+"And it's 3500 feet down to the Valley? Dear me!" "And that is the
+Cathedral Rock? And those two peaks are the Spires? I don't exactly see
+the resemblance; do you?"
+
+There was a sort of wail of delight from us all as we came on the
+"Bridal Veil Fall"; and I do not think any one cared to know that it
+was just 60 short of 1000 feet high! Surely one of the most graceful,
+lovely _chutes d'eau_ on earth, lost though it be from view behind the
+rocks at the close of its feathery flight! But there was no stopping to
+look at anything; relentless Fate drove us down and on, till the wheels
+rolled more evenly, and at last we came to the bed of the valley--some
+1800 yards broad, opening out here and there yet wider--and we
+rejoiced in the sight of the bright clear water of the Merced, child
+of innumerable icy mothers, flashing, sparkling, dashing and brawling,
+like a myriad Lodores, between her banks decked with flowers and
+covered with forest trees.
+
+Suddenly there dashed out of a glade two cavaliers, and made full tilt
+at the leading carriage. "To arms!" Not a bit of it! Nor banditti
+or Injuns--of whom we had met one or two riding sullenly along to
+the hunting-grounds--no, only two hotel touts armed with cards of
+self-commendation, and not apparently in much rivalry, for when told
+that we had engaged our hotel, they galloped off to waylay other
+travellers, of whose coming they were apprized by our driver. Our
+hotel, I may say by the way, gave us full contentment. The site was
+admirable, commanding a full and near view of _the_ Fall of Falls--the
+Yosemite--which had so fascinated our eyes that we could scarce divert
+them to any other object--not "Widow's Tears," or "Virgin's Tears,"
+nor the "Three Brothers," not anything but the Yosemite! And so, when
+our rooms were pointed out, we made off to the spot where the fine
+cloudlike vapour rising above the tree-tops indicated the basin into
+which the waters sought rest after their troubled leap.
+
+Our way lay through the usual gathering of stores, hotels, livery
+stables for the horses and ponies needed for the excursions, and
+curiosity dealers' shops, to the village street, as it may be termed,
+shadowed by fine trees, under which reposed some Indians--one of whom,
+an Amazon in yellow toga, went riding full gallop past us, her hair
+falling in a black mat on her shoulders, sitting low, in Melton style,
+regardless of poultry, children, and boulders, and vanishing in a cloud
+of dust under the trees. Then we turned to the left and crossed the
+river by a rustic bridge; and as I looked down into the dancing waters
+certain shadow-like objects flew up against the current. "Trout?"
+asked I. "Yes, they're trout. They take 'em--when they dew--five
+pounds weight. The Injuns catch 'em. We don't understand it as well."
+A short walk, with eyes ever up-turned, and we come out to a moraine,
+and, clambering up over a mass of trunks of trees and decaying timber,
+_the_ Falls were before us--I cannot write more--no adjective will do.
+"Two thousand six hundred and thirty-four feet, mind!" says the voice.
+"I don't care," thought we, "it's the most beautiful and wonderful
+water-jump ever seen by human eye." "It only remains," as they say, to
+state that there is first, falling over a sheet of granite straight as
+a wall, a considerable river, which in the plunge comes down at once
+1600 feet. There, in a basin of rock, it collects its scattered forces,
+under cover of eternal spray and cloud, and then takes another header
+of 434 feet to a barrier of granite, against which it rages for a mad
+moment, till it swells over and escapes from control by another spring
+of 600 feet sheer down--and now it is free, and rushes past at our
+feet, a joyous flashing stream.
+
+We returned through the meadows from the Falls, and as I was walking
+in advance of the party a snake wriggled across the path, which I
+struck at instinctively with my stick, and was lucky enough to kill
+at the first blow. I exhibited the carcass, or whatever a snake's
+dead body may be, in triumph to my companions. Further on our way we
+fell in with an old Frenchman who was carrying a basket of fruit from
+his little garden to the inn. With all the courtesy of his country,
+he offered to Lady Green the choicest in his little _corbeille_. He
+came from Lorraine very long ago to prospect in the States, almost the
+earliest of the pioneers, but he was still strong and active, and he
+pointed with great satisfaction up to a white flag planted on a dizzy
+height above, which he said he had placed with his own hands. The chief
+livery stable keeper is a German named Stegman. The first ascent of the
+Dome was made by a young Scotchman named Anderson, from Montrose; so
+with Indians, Americans, Mexicans, Europeans, there is a very liberal
+representation of the nations of the world, in the season, in the
+valley. Mr. Hutchinson, the Conservator of the Valley--one with all
+the enthusiasm of the American character in everything pertaining to
+the country, aggravated in this instance by an intense admiration for
+the valley over which he is appointed to watch--joined us at dinner in
+the little inn. Full of information, bubbling over with anecdote and
+illustration, and replete with all kinds of knowledge concentrated upon
+the one object--the Valley--the Valley--and nothing but the Valley.
+He knows its history since the time it was first discovered, and its
+natural history and geological formation, and all about the Indians who
+lived there and their traditions. It so happened that the Commissioners
+of the State of California, who are bound to visit the public
+domains, were also at the hotel, and so we had quite an unofficial and
+ceremonious meeting; and presently, as we stood in front of the hotel
+gazing up on the peaks, lighted up by the stars, and listening to the
+thunder of the waterfall, a startling report burst out on the night,
+and in another instant the echoes repeated from rock to rock were
+crashing through the Valley with the roar of heaven's artillery. It
+was the first gun of a salute ordered by the Commissioners to be fired
+in honour of the Duke's arrival. The effect was very fine, but I doubt
+whether I did not feel full of resentment at the outburst, very much as
+the owls and night-hawks might have been expected to feel, if one could
+judge from their cries. However, even a salute and echoes must come to
+an end, and as we were to get up early to start for the Mirror Lake, we
+turned in to bed at an early hour; not, however, to sleep, because the
+indefatigable and numerous company in the public room, off which were
+our bedrooms, were in high spirits, and the song and the dance, to the
+accompaniment of an invalid piano, for some time asserted their sway.
+
+Mr. Hutchinson had the Duke out early, because it is one of the
+obligations to see the sun rise, reflected in the Mirror Lake--if
+you can. There is no fear of cloud or rain. In the Mirror Lake is
+reflected--or was as we saw it--the precipice at the other side of the
+Valley, the bulk of Mount Watkins (so called from a photographer who
+has been daring and successful in his renderings of the Yosemite), and
+all the surrounding scenery. Once a friend and I saw a cow on its back
+in the air, by the shore of a Highland lake. The surface was smooth as
+that of the Mirror before us now. It was flapping its tail from side to
+side, and its forelegs were up in the sky. We could not make it out at
+first. There was, in fact, a cow standing near the water of the loch;
+and what we saw was a reflection of the animal, actually stronger and
+better defined than the object itself. So it was with the reflections
+in the Mirror Lake; but when the sun rose over the cliff and we looked
+at the water, the glare was too dazzling. "It was," as Mr. Wright
+remarked, "like the electric light." There were curious optical effects
+produced, some being troubled with purple, others with green or yellow
+in their eyes, after a vain attempt to look at the reflection, but that
+did not last long.
+
+We returned to breakfast to make an early start for Union and Glacier
+Points on ponies. Among the company at the hotel, introduced by Mr.
+Hutchinson, there was a young lady who was well acquainted with the
+Valley, and who proved to be a very agreeable companion in our mountain
+ride; but it was not long ere she was candid enough to let it be known
+that she did not visit the Yosemite out of love of the picturesque and
+beautiful, but that she was interested in the sale of photographs of
+the Valley, and was, in fact, a very persuasive and efficient agent of
+a firm in San Francisco, who had thus established an outlying picket of
+great activity and vigilance; and I am sure we all hope she may always
+be as successful with the visitors as she was with us. Of what we saw
+from the Glacier Point I must leave others to write or speak. It is
+reached by a zigzag on the mountain-side--a peculium of the maker, and
+all the "trails," as they are called, in the valley are the property
+of individuals or firms who are paid by tariff, and we heard "Eleven
+gone up before--Duke Sutherland, Lady Green, Sir Green, Mr. Wright, Mr.
+Russell, Mr. Jerome coming! Sixteen coming up behind!" On the plateau
+behind the cliffs, from which you look down on the Valley and at the
+snowfields on the mountain ranges opposite, there is a log house and
+shanty, and there we had a mountain meal ere we began the descent.
+
+Nothing in the way of riding is more disagreeable than going down
+a very sharp mountain-side on a pony not, for all you know, very
+sure-footed, and so instead of riding, I resolved to walk, now and
+then taking a short cut, to the great discomfiture of feet and boots,
+although it is three thousand feet to the bottom, and make the best
+of my way and the most of the road, which is very fair, down the zig
+zags. I reached the plain thoroughly hot and tired, and bathed in
+perspiration, in fifty-seven minutes. The horsekeeper, who came down
+with the rest of the party, seemed to have been affected by the rarity
+of the atmosphere or something else up at the mountain hostelry, for
+he insisted on it that I had ridden down, and demanded his horse.
+"What the thunder, Russell, have you done with my horse?" he asked
+again and again. Satisfied for the time by my assurances that I had
+not ridden at all, he went off, and then, thinking over the matter,
+came back again to repeat his question, till I told him I would not
+answer it any more. He was an amusing fellow in his way, and affable.
+He called the Duke "Sutherland," now and then putting Mr. before it.
+As he was watering his horses, he said: "Here, Mister Sutherland, lay
+hold of the bucket, will you, whilst I take a turn at this one." And
+the Duke did so with alacrity. It was a day of incessant activity. No
+sooner had the mountain party come down than they were off again to
+drive through the Valley. The rest of our party had already executed
+masterly investigations at the foot of all the waterfalls; admired
+the Bridal Veil and the Widow's Tear, as one cascade is satirically
+termed, "because," says the guide, "it dries up in six months;" had
+driven and ridden everywhere and seen everything, and we had to do the
+same; but it would need a week of conscientious work to exploit the
+Valley thoroughly. At half-past 7, the dinner hour, the little inn was
+swarming with people; the stage had arrived with fresh contingents.
+Every place was full, and what with the clatter of knives and forks,
+the clamour of waiters, the tumult of voices laughing and talking,
+it was scarcely possible to conceive that a few short years ago this
+valley was in the exclusive possession of the Indian and the wild
+beast. There is now, however, a great conflict of interests, and Mammon
+is holding his revels in the Valley. The State has voted a certain
+sum of money, twenty-five thousand dollars, I think, to buy up the
+interests of the trail-makers; that is, those who struck out and made
+paths to the various objects of attraction; but no success has yet been
+attained in the negotiations, and, indeed, I should think it a very
+bad investment for most of them to accept their share of such a sum.
+Macaulay, for example, who made the path up to the point from which
+we descended to-day, must make many hundreds of dollars in the height
+of the season, as he charges so much a visitor, and, besides, has a
+restaurant where they take their meals at the top.
+
+Next day (June 5th) we left the Yosemite with the satisfactory
+assurance that we had made the most of our time, though we could not
+believe we had done it justice. There were some small "nuages" on the
+face of our "Mirror Lake," caused by changes in the mode of conveyance;
+but we found six horses and one of the coaches of the country were
+better than four horses and two carriages of less capacity. Yosemite,
+I may tell my readers, means "Grizzly Bear" (it may be "Great Grizzly
+Bear"); but we only heard of one having been thereabouts for a long
+time, and I believe it was thoroughly tamed. After a glorious day in
+the woods, clambering up the steep from the Valley, and then on by the
+road--the only one--to Clarke's, halted there for the night, when we
+returned from a ceremonious visit to the "Big Trees." We had a most
+delightful ride from Bruce's, and a hard canter back through the woods
+on capital ponies, full of life and action, and very sure-footed, but
+rather inclined to have their own way, which was not always that of
+the rider. We turned into bed at Bruce's, quite delighted with our
+expedition, and rather anxious to see the road we had traversed in the
+dark by the garish light of day. Every traveller's tale, and every
+guide-book of recent date relating to this part of the world, has a
+full account of the dimensions, number, appearance, and condition of
+these wonders of the world. They are either prostrate, mutilated, or
+decaying; not one has survived the stormy life he must have led for
+some 3000 years--a few hundreds more or less do not signify. Those
+which remain upright are scarred by fire and lightning, and drop their
+monster arms, hung with ragged foliage and sheets of bright moss,
+mournfully over the ground where their trunks will repose in time to
+come. I cannot conceive any object of the kind so magnificent as one
+of those Washingtonias in the full vigour of mature treehood; but we
+could only fancy what it must have been like by measuring the stems,
+for there was not anywhere in the forest a tree to be seen which had
+not suffered. The best way to visit the scene--for it may well be
+called so--is to strike out from the road on the way to the Yosemite
+before the halt at Bruce's; but the hotel-keepers and stage-drivers
+will persuade the stranger, if they can, to defer the excursion till
+his return from the Valley, so as to make a half-day more out of him.
+
+_June 6th._--All up at 5 o'clock, and off soon after 6 A.M. The first
+stage, eleven miles, we did in two hours and ten minutes--a very
+pretty road; the second stage, eight miles, in forty-four minutes. The
+ravages made by fires are most deplorable. We had passed through this
+great forest track in the dark, but now seen in the morning light, the
+trunks of magnificent trees rotting on the ground, or standing upright
+with lifeless arms, consumed at the base, were visible everywhere.
+It is difficult to find out the exact truth about the cause of these
+fires. Some few people said "it was the Indians," but the weight of
+testimony attributes them to the shepherds, who for the most trifling
+purposes kindle a great fire. In some of the large trees they have
+hollowed out regular chambers, and of course the tree dies. Such waste
+of timber! For mile after mile we passed scenes of desolation which
+ere long those who allowed them will have cause to regret. From time
+to time we encountered on the road trains of waggons drawn by teams of
+handsome mules with bells, and had occasion to admire the economy of
+labour exhibited in the management, by which the driver is enabled to
+work a powerful break with one hand whilst he drives with the other.
+The next stage, of fourteen miles, was over an exceedingly bad road;
+but the horses were good, and we rattled along at a capital speed down
+towards the plain. Once the quick-eyed driver, pulling up suddenly,
+said, "See that rattle?" leaped down and made towards the bush; and
+as we followed him, sure enough we heard distinctly the noise of the
+snake, which he had intercepted on its way to a rabbit hole. It took
+refuge in a clump of bushes with gnarled roots, and coiled itself round
+one of the branches; but by a course of judicious and rather nervous
+poking it was driven from its vantage ground, and trying to escape was
+killed by the driver with a blow of his whip, followed by a good many
+unnecessary strokes from the rest of the party. It was over three feet
+long, and had just been making an evening meal upon a rabbit, which it
+had left where we had startled it; and it was evident from its swollen
+appearance that it had been for some time engaged in the warren close
+at hand.
+
+At 10.20 we reached Fresno, which is what the Americans call "quite
+a place," containing not only an hotel, a restaurant, and a store,
+but a shop where photographs were exhibited. The _chef-d'oeuvre_, a
+portrait of a Spanish lady 140 years of age, living at Los Angeles, did
+not, however, commend itself to our taste. We halted at Coarse Gold at
+11.40, and left at 12.35. Mr. Jerry Loghlan--who excused himself for
+not working on the ground that "there was no use in it, as there was
+nothing to be had," the mines being worked "out"--whose acquaintance we
+had made on the way up, a huge, broad-shouldered _vaurien_, was still
+hanging about with his specimens of quartz, gold, and rattlesnakes'
+tails, and a black eye recently acquired in battle.
+
+After a long, hot, and dusty drive, it was with no small gratification
+we made out on the flat the houses of Madera, and after a time the
+carriages of the special train. The air is so bright and pure that the
+distances are very deceptive, and it was nearly 5 o'clock P.M. before
+we reached the station, which had been visible for more than an hour
+previously. It was pleasant news to hear that the little German barber
+at the way-side had got baths all ready. In the rear of his shop there
+was a row of apartments, each provided with a clean zinc bath, hot and
+cold water to turn on at discretion, and an abundance of towels. This
+in the centre of a waste seemed very creditable to the civilisation
+of the people. I should like to know in what part of Europe you would
+get similar comfort under similar circumstances. I am afraid there are
+many parts of the British Islands where a traveller would demand such
+a luxury in vain. And the barber was there to shave those who needed
+it, and to give you all the news of the day if you wanted it. He was
+a Prussian, and he grinned from ear to ear as, in reply to my question
+whether he had served, he said: "Serve, indeed! Not I. I came away and
+escaped from all that nonsense. There is not a king or an emperor or a
+prince that I would fight for. Why should I?" "But," said I, "you would
+have to fight for the Republic here if it were in danger; and that
+would not be fighting for your fatherland." "Yes," said he, "it would,
+for this is my fatherland now. But I do not want to fight for it either
+if I can help it. Fighting is nonsense."
+
+Our excellent stewards received us, if not with open arms, with smiling
+faces. The carriages were trim and clean and fresh, the tables spread
+out, and all kinds of dainties provided for the evening meal. We rested
+quietly for the night in the siding at Madera, and got under weigh at
+5 o'clock on the morning of June 7th, the train being timed so as to
+reach San Francisco at 12.30.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The Real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!"
+
+
+The British Consul, Mr. Booker, who has been watching over the
+interests of the Queen's subjects for some thirty years here, and who
+is an institution by himself, met the train at a place called, I think,
+Porta Costa, and welcomed the Duke and his friends. There had been
+for some days an infusion of the Chinaman in the general element of
+life along the line, but here it became concentrated, and then ceased
+to attract much attention. As the train approached the wide expanse
+of muddy water from the Sacramento, which charges down with impetuous
+volume, and colours the bay with its turbid stream, we could form an
+idea of some of the advantages in the expanse of navigable river, that
+had, however, lain long without appreciation but for the bright red
+gold possessed by San Francisco. The bay is animated; white canvassed
+craft stud its waters, and the smoke of steamers pollutes the clear,
+bracing air. Italian fishermen are busy with line and net, and flights
+of ducks and squadrons of gulls and cormorants show that the waters
+are well stocked. It was too late in the year to see the country in
+the full affluence of its wealth of fruit and crops, of hay and corn,
+and the hillsides and fields are now disappointingly brown. Presently
+we arrived at Oakland, where the train was run out on a pier 3500
+yards long, to the steam ferry-boat which was to convey us across
+to San Francisco. The ferry-boat was crowded, for Oakland is a city
+of some 50,000 people; and of course it had once on a time, not very
+remote, only a few sheds and insignificant houses. From this side of
+the bay the city of the Golden Gate, some miles away, was now visible
+in all its pride of place--pride but not beauty, now at least--for the
+city presents no great attraction to the eye. The streets, running in
+parallel lines at right angles to the quay right up the sandy hillside,
+look like the ribs of some stranded monster, "lank and lean and
+brown." The most prominent object is the hotel to which we are going,
+which towers far over the general level of house-top, steeple, and
+factory-chimney.
+
+There is a little pamphlet, crammed with statistics and with an array
+of figures and superlatives enough to daze one, given to the guests
+of the Palace Hotel; but those who are in that happy category scarcely
+need the information, and those who are not could not derive any idea
+of the building from the repetition of the ciphers which are to be
+found in the guide-book. The drawing on the outside affords the best
+notion of the size, but only actual purview can enable one to judge
+of the excellent arrangements, the service, the table. For once the
+American idol "Immensity" is not overlaid. "'Tis blinding bright--'tis
+blazing white! O Vulcan! what a glow!" Electric lights flooding the
+court with brightness beyond description. And what a court! Sweetness
+and light indeed! In the great quadrangle, 144 feet by 84, there are
+fountains playing, groups of statuary, and exotic plants, and, tier
+after tier, rise the pillared terraces outside the seven storeys of
+which the main building consists, painted a lustrous white, shining
+like purest Parian. There are 755 rooms, abounding in conveniences,
+and comfortably luxurious. Each is provided with high-pressure hot and
+cold water, and there is an elaborate system of ventilation, alarms,
+conductors, pneumatic tubes, telephones, and "annunciators" for fire,
+letters, servants, &c. The beds are excellent; the furniture admirable;
+and this vast structure, 120 feet high, 275 feet broad, and 350 feet
+deep, is not only fire, but--listen--"earthquake proof"; so says the
+bill of fare, and so says ex-Senator W. Sharon, the proprietor. I have
+not the least desire to test the truth of the averment, but if I must
+be in a hotel when an earthquake visits the city in which I am, let me
+be in the Palace, San Francisco. A man may live here in the enjoyment
+of a pretty continuous series of meals and one of the best bedrooms
+for four dollars a day, and there is a lower tariff of bed and board at
+three dollars a day.
+
+_June 8th._--Our first day was rendered exceedingly pleasant by the
+kindness of General McDowell. The weather did its very best to prevent
+our enjoying it, and was signally defeated. San Francisco is perhaps
+the windiest city in the world, and at this time of year there is
+almost always a storm in the harbour, and a steady, powerful, and
+somewhat chilly blast, setting in a little before noon, and lasting
+throughout the day until nearly sundown, up the streets. The General's
+aide-de-camps came over early to the hotel, in full uniform, in honour
+of Major-General Green, but General McDowell appeared in mufti, which
+eased us down a little. A powerful steamer, the "_General Macpherson_,"
+was prepared for the party, which was swollen by a considerable number
+of gentlemen invited by our host to meet the Duke, and the gentlemen
+from Topeka, who were included in the invitation. The excursion
+afforded a favourable opportunity of inspecting the city defences.
+From Alcatraz Fort, Point and Presidio Island batteries, which would
+not be considered very formidable as far as armament is concerned,
+although their position affords great advantages for torpedo defence,
+salutes were fired in honour of Sir Henry Green. But in the case of
+some of us the sight was marred by the rising sea, which increased to
+an inconvenient height as the steamer reached the Seal Rocks, close to
+the entrance to the bay. Of the seals I shall give an account farther
+on. They did not seem to mind the steamer very much until she blew her
+whistle, when many of them splashed into the sea. At the termination of
+the trip, which lasted some four hours, General McDowell entertained
+the party at his official quarters, which are beautifully situated on
+a bluff overhanging the water of the bay.
+
+_June 9th._--We spent, in some respects, an abortive and deceitful
+day; not, indeed, that there was anything disappointing about our
+entertainment at Belmont, under the auspices of ex-Senator Sharon;
+but that we started full of enterprise, and intent upon inspecting the
+great works of the Spring Valley Reservoir, and of making an excursion
+through what was described as a very beautiful county whence is
+brought the water supply of the great city in which we were sojourning.
+However, though we were baulked in the object of our expedition, the
+day passed, and not in the least degree unpleasantly, and instead of
+going to the Lakes we drove about the neighbourhood of Belmont, and
+visited several country seats.
+
+No one who visits San Francisco should omit taking an early opportunity
+of going to Palo-Alto to inspect the stock of General Stanford's
+thorough-breds, and the breeding establishment, which as a sample of
+perfect order and management cannot be surpassed. I cannot answer for
+the figures, but I was informed that the owner spends 25,000_l._ a year
+upon the maintenance of his stud and stables, and that he has not as
+yet sold a colt or filly, or parted with a single animal; sires, mares,
+and young brood now amounting to about 700 head. They are beautifully
+housed in detached stables fitted up with every convenience that a
+horse of the highest pedigree and most luxurious taste can desire.
+I was particularly struck with the perfect silence which prevailed
+throughout the stables. No shouts to "stand over there," and none of
+that "----" (groom's expletive) which is so common in our country.
+And partly owing perhaps to that mode of treatment, and to gentleness
+in handling, all the horses without exception seemed tractable and
+sweet-tempered. High-bred stallions stood out in the open for our
+inspection, and allowed themselves to be rubbed and felt without even
+laying down their ears or raising a hind-leg from the ground. In reply
+to a question respecting a remarkably beautiful animal, which seemed to
+have a little more fire in him, the head groom said "You may walk under
+his belly if you like," and then and there he told one of the grooms
+to do so, which the man did, without attracting any unusual degree of
+attention from the animal. Outside one of the large blocks of stables
+there is a kind of testing arena, in which we were told it was the
+pleasure of General Stanford, when he was at home, to sit watching the
+performance of his young horses. It is an ellipse, like a large circus,
+bordered with a hoarding, and in the centre there is a raised stage for
+the visitors, on which are revolving chairs. The riding-master, with an
+attendant, performing the functions of the late Mr. Widdicombe, sets
+the animal in motion, checking him when he breaks into a gallop. The
+speed at which the animal trots the ellipse is known by the time marked
+on a chronometer, and the fact is recorded for the information of the
+inspectors, who can turn round their chairs and follow the action of
+the horse as it trots round the ring.
+
+The district of the State in which Palo-Alto is situated boasts of
+several residences of the Californian millionaires. One house which
+we visited, I think belonging to Mr. Flood, furnished the most ornate
+and beautiful examples of woodwork that were ever seen by any of the
+party. The house, which was as large as a good-sized English country
+mansion, is constructed of timber of the finest quality, beautifully
+worked, painted and varnished; and with moderate care a mansion of this
+kind will last, in this climate, a couple of hundred years, which to
+the American mind is an eternity. There were artists from New York,
+and the staff of an upholsterer and decorator of great renown from the
+Empire City were still busily engaged in the place as we went through
+the rooms. The magnificent halls, reception-rooms, billiard-rooms,
+library, bedrooms, all fitted up with extraordinary luxuriousness,
+but in a somewhat florid taste, were of wood, the doors of many of
+the apartments arresting attention by their extraordinary beauty and
+finish. The ceilings decorated in fresco by Italian artists, and bright
+windows filled with stained glass gave an appearance of light and
+grace to the whole residence. The kitchen arrangements were marvels
+of ingenuity, and one envied the butler who would have such a pantry
+as that which was displayed for our inspection. Some of the pictures
+which were ready to be placed on the walls were remarkable, however,
+only for the richness of their frames; and, indeed, we heard that
+the excellent proprietor was not a man of very cultivated taste; a
+child of fortune, in the prime of life and of money-making, spending
+a portion of his enormous wealth with an easy hand, but destitute of
+what is called book-learning, and leaving to some future generation the
+cultivation of the graces and the acquirement of accomplishments which
+the circumstances of his early life had denied him to effect.
+
+It had been arranged that we should return to San Francisco to dinner,
+but Senator Sharon had in his secret heart resolved that we should do
+nothing of the kind, or at least, that if we did so, it should only be
+after we had partaken of such a feast at Belmont as would very much
+indispose us to test the capabilities of the _chef_ of the Palace
+Hotel. From Palo-Alto accordingly we were driven to the charming
+country house, some miles away, of the ex-senator of Oregon, and we
+were regaled there, after some delay, at a very elaborate _déjeûner_,
+sent out from San Francisco. It was nigh 8 o'clock ere we got back
+to the city; and the night ended by what might well be called "an
+excursion" to the Baldwin Theatre, which was at the time the most
+attractive of the places of entertainment of that sort open in the
+city. As some of us were walking back, after the play was over, with
+an American friend, talking of the "hoodlums," famous rowdies, who, we
+were assured, had been of late days utterly broken up by the vigilance
+of the police, our attention was attracted to a number of lads smoking
+at the corner of the street. Our friend said "Hoodlums broken up! There
+they are--don't you believe it. That's a lot of them, and if you were
+alone you might find out very unpleasantly that there are plenty of
+them."
+
+The San Francisco journalists possess astonishing powers of
+imagination. I rubbed my eyes when I read that I had described "with
+eloquence the similarity between a marsh at San Bruno and a patch
+of jungle in the north-west of Scinde, where I had the felicity
+of spending three weeks with General Green while the natives were
+arranging a plan to capture the party and cut our throats." I never
+was in the north-west of Scinde in my life, and, although I had the
+pleasure of passing a longer time in his company in the United States,
+and of being on the same plateau before Sebastopol when he was there,
+for a still longer period, many years before, I never spent three
+weeks there with General Green. The Duke was described as "professing,
+but showing, little enthusiasm." However, these matters are of very
+slight interest or importance; only one wonders how many of the readers
+of this sort of literary work believe in it. One of our party has,
+according to a local paper, become a clergyman, and now rejoices in the
+style and title of "the Bishop," by which he is universally addressed
+by the party.
+
+While in the train, on our way to Belmont, I had the pleasure of
+being introduced to a gentleman who, although a lawyer in very large
+practice, is General of the State Volunteers; and in the course of
+conversation, I heard that he had papers containing the statement of
+a gentleman who had visited, and which convinced him that the real
+Roger Tichborne was living not very far from San Francisco. General
+Barnes, whose name and character stand high in the city of the Golden
+Gate, and whom I found to be a gentleman of great intelligence, seemed
+perfectly satisfied by the story told by this new "claimant"; but what
+he mentioned to me did not at all tend to create in my mind any notion
+that he was not an impostor, and especially were my doubts confirmed by
+the quotations which General Barnes made from some of the narrative, in
+which there was a ridiculous jumble of French and English, in order to
+justify, apparently, the stress placed by the "claimant" in his story
+on that part of his life which was passed in France. He spoke of his
+uncle as "mon oncle," and of Thursday as "Jeudi," and so on. However,
+General Barnes appeared to be so impressed by the truthfulness of the
+man's bearing, and by the full details he gave him at an audience
+in which he supplied the facts for the consecutive narrative which
+I was promised, that I expressed a desire to read it. General Barnes
+subsequently sent me a long written paper containing the heads of the
+claimant's story, a perusal of which strengthened the conviction I
+had previously entertained. I only mention this circumstance because
+there was a report spread throughout the Press, by the agency of one
+of the great telegraphic associations which furnish the American
+public with intelligence, that the Duke of Sutherland and myself
+had interviewed the real Roger Tichborne at San Francisco, and had
+satisfied ourselves that he was the man; and innumerable "headings"
+were invented for this supposed interview, of which I was soon made
+aware on my return westward in every newspaper that I read. I promptly
+denied the statement that the Duke or myself had seen the new claimant,
+and although the denial appeared in print I was exasperated day after
+day by being asked questions afterwards with regard to this supposed
+conversation with Tichborne at San Francisco, and by inquiries as to
+my real impression; so it would appear that no one had seen or paid
+any attention to the refutation of the story which had brought down
+on my devoted head communications from friends of other Tichbornes,
+of whom there are several living, some in poverty and others in
+comparative affluence, in various cities and districts of the United
+States. I had further the mortification of seeing it stated in print
+that I had used disparaging words in alluding to the credulity of
+General Barnes, which was an entirely baseless fabrication. With all
+the extraordinary keenness of the American mind generally, there is
+associated with it a considerable amount of the Anglo-Saxon quality
+which is termed "gullibility," and the land swarms with impostors who
+make a living out of the easy faith of the population. I do not speak
+merely of spiritualists, quacks, and professors of peculiar religions
+or medical dogmas, nor of the preachers of eccentric forms of faith or
+unbelief, but of the mass of persons who contrive to get an existence
+by representing that they are "someone else." Although their tricks
+are well known, the trade still flourishes. They are always the "sons
+of peers," who have got into disgrace with their families, but who
+will eventually be owners of castles of historic fame and of enormous
+estates; "distinguished soldiers"; "Maids of Honour to the Queen,"
+who for some unknown reasons are living in small out-of-the-way
+villages in the West; or political conspirators who have played a great
+part on some distinguished stage and have saved themselves from the
+consequences of defeated enterprize by taking refuge in the States.
+And then there are hordes of persons who are known by the title of
+"confidence men," who travel about on the trains or in the steamers,
+looking out for victims, or lounging about the bars and saloons,
+waiting for their prey in the shape of some facile and easy-eared
+stranger, who in consideration of their merits and distress shall give
+them temporary assistance. Sometimes, doubtless, there are cases of
+very real suffering, sorrow, and poverty, to which exile in the United
+States affords a melancholy refuge. I was obliged to hear in one great
+city of a gallant soldier who, reduced to poverty by no fault of his
+own, had quitted England and given up the society of his friends,
+and lived in a small suburb of a town on the coast of the Pacific,
+his secret known only to one or two officials, shunning all contact
+with his countrymen and evading as far as possible all inquiries of
+his friends. In San Francisco, where there is a poor-house open to
+strangers and to native-born Americans alike, there are, I am told, to
+be met with extraordinary exemplifications of the "downs" of fortune.
+Adventurous and daring spirits, and pioneers of civilisation, at one
+time probably possessed of wealth which was wasted in dissipation,
+or lost in unfortunate speculations, are there, talking of the days
+that are gone, in all languages of the world, and awaiting their end;
+while others who started with them in the same race are building their
+palaces or revelling in the enjoyment of wealth, compared to which our
+greatest fortunes are, if figures can be trusted, a mere bagatelle. How
+rapidly some of these fortunes can be made was illustrated by numerous
+stories connected with some of the richest men in California. I was
+told by an eminent tradesman of San Francisco that one day a miner came
+into his establishment to buy a watch, which he said must be cheap
+and good, for he wanted something he could trust to in the matter of
+time, as he was going off with a party on an exploring expedition
+after gold. This was in the early time of the great "booms" in the
+West. He selected a watch, for which he paid $40, and departed. The
+following day he appeared in the shop and asked to see the proprietor,
+and then, producing the watch, he said he would like to have $30 for
+it, as he had lost all his money in a "spree" the night before and
+must have something to start with. The jeweller said, "Well, I will
+return you what you gave me for the watch, as it has suffered no harm,
+and you shall have your $40 back again." The man went away exceedingly
+rejoiced, and the incident was forgotten. Some eighteen months
+afterwards a man came to the establishment, and looking at rings, gold
+chains, and jewellery of the most costly character, and asking for the
+best of everything that they had got, gave orders which occasioned the
+attendant to have some doubts as to his sanity, or certainly as to the
+means he had of paying the amount, which was rapidly running up to tens
+of thousands of dollars. So he sought out his principal. The strange
+customer said, "I suppose you don't know me?" which was admitted to
+be the case. He went on buying all the same, making the remark, "You
+need not be uneasy about the money, for So-and-so (the bankers) will
+tell you I am all right, and when you send the things home you shall
+be paid. I am Joe Smith, from whom some time ago you took a watch he
+bought from you when he came to your store, and gave him the full value
+for it when he was in want of money," and so departed, having shown his
+gratitude by buying 6000_l._ worth of jewellery. This worthy miner is
+now one of the wealthy pillars of the State.
+
+The Chinese quarter of San Francisco has been described, I will not say
+_ad nauseam_, but as often as any book has been written which contains
+an account of a visit to the city of the Golden Gate. Of course we
+went there, and saw all that was to be seen under the best possible
+auspices, for Mr. Bee, whom I have already mentioned, was our guide
+and companion, assisted by an exceedingly intelligent officer of the
+police force; and on the occasion of our second visit, when we went to
+the theatre, we had the advantage of being under the protection of the
+gentleman who represents law and order, on behalf of the municipality,
+in connection with the Chinese population and the arrangements for
+theatrical performances.
+
+The inspection of the dreadful den in which the opium-smokers were to
+be seen suggested to my mind a train of thought in connection with the
+traffic which I would not willingly have communicated to my American
+friends. It will seem incredible some day to the awakened conscience
+of the nation that we should have ever sanctioned such a frightful
+crime as the opium traffic. "It only poisons about two millions of
+people," is the excuse, "and brings in one-sixth of the whole revenue
+of India." If ever it were justifiable to utter the exclamation "Perish
+India!" it would be, I believe, in regard to that disgraceful source of
+revenue, and the necessity that is imposed upon us, as it is alleged,
+to raise it, in order to maintain the government of our Indian empire.
+Here in San Francisco the State has nothing to do with the sale of the
+poison, and it is very questionable whether the police regulations
+should not be applied to it, just as they are to persons who have
+tried to commit suicide, or to the inebriates in public-houses, or to
+places where intemperance is carried on to an extent injurious to the
+public peace. Death is the inevitable result of continued indulgence
+in opium-smoking, although it is true that in some cases the victim
+lingers on a few years, utterly indifferent to all the business of life
+except the one--the means of supplying himself with his only source
+of enjoyment. I was in one of the shops where they sell the drug, and
+was much struck by the cadaverous, sunken faces of the unfortunate
+customers, with bright dreamy eyes, trembling limbs, and wasted bodies,
+who came in to buy it. It is cheap enough, in all conscience, as a very
+small quantity suffices to produce what is called "the desired effect";
+but for its bulk it is exceedingly dear, and indulgence in it must
+consume a considerable amount of the earnings of the best-paid artisans
+when they are no longer able to earn sufficient to keep them with a
+full supply. "Then," as our informant says, "they will commit any crime
+to get it."
+
+The general impression made upon me by the appearance of the Chinese
+population was most favourable. I do not now speak of what one might
+see in going through the haunts where the police regulations assign
+exclusive possession to certain classes of the population, which, sooth
+to say, seemed numerous enough; I refer to the business quarters, and
+to the crowds of cleanly, intelligent, well-behaved people of both
+sexes in the streets. General McDowell, and many other persons, for
+whose opinion the greatest respect must be entertained, look with
+apprehension on the effect of the Chinese immigration, and have,
+indeed, declared that it will destroy the Union if it be not checked;
+and these apprehensions are based upon the possibility that in time
+millions on millions of the swarming population of China will inundate
+the United States, gradually overrun town after town, usurping all
+the fields of labour, and beating down the white man to the greatest
+misery by competition in every branch of trade, industry, and labour.
+This party has successfully, I believe, impressed its views upon a
+considerable number of senators and representatives in the Eastern
+States, who can exercise pressure on the Supreme Government; and
+the treaty recently signed between the Republic and China contains
+provisions which enable the authorities at the western seaports to
+exercise considerable control over the current of emigration. But, on
+the other hand, it is alleged that the fears which are expressed of
+a rapidly increasing exodus of Chinese from China, and an anabasis
+into the United States, are purely imaginary--in fact, unreal and
+pretentious. The pro-Chinese party allege that the emigration comes
+from only one port in one province, and that you may go all over the
+West, and ask any Chinaman or Chinawoman where he or she comes from,
+and you are met with the invariable answer, from the one port. The
+friends of the Chinese--arguing, moreover, that the State at large
+is benefited enormously by the accession to its resources from the
+Celestial Empire, and that the labour was attacked, not because it
+was cheap, but because it was good; that it is now indispensable, for
+without Chinamen and Chinawomen it would be almost impossible to carry
+on the ordinary life of these cities--allege that the agitation which
+has been so violent in San Francisco is mainly encouraged by those
+who want to secure the Irish vote. Colonel Bee represents these views
+very strongly. He argues that Canton, not larger than the State of
+New Hampshire, is the sole source of emigration. He insists on it that
+there are no more than 100,000 Chinese in the whole of the Union, and
+that for the last ten years the emigrants have not sufficed to fill
+the places of those who had gone home with money, never intending to
+return, or who had died. He maintains, indeed, that the Chinese are
+decreasing rather than otherwise; and with all the power of figures,
+which he has at his fingers' ends as Consul, demonstrates that a very
+large proportion of the Chinese who are entered as arriving at San
+Francisco and other parts are the same men and women as those who came
+some years previously and went back to their native country, returning
+to gain more dollars.
+
+The principal enemies of the Chinese are the Irish, who, having
+monopolised the whole of the work of bricklayers, plasterers, carters,
+porters, and general labourers until their arrival, have been forced
+to reduce their rates of labour steadily by the competition of the
+Chinaman.
+
+The part of the population of San Francisco denominated the Sand lot,
+and especially those connected with the political associations of the
+city, do not by any means share Colonel Bee's views; but the agitation
+is dying out, and the meetings, which were of weekly occurrence, to
+excite the people against the Mongolians have decreased in number,
+importance, and interest. The directors of public companies, and
+the contractors for public works, are all in favour of the Chinese
+workman, who is sober, industrious, and orderly; and although the trade
+combinations among them are exceedingly subtle, and their powers of
+association for trade purposes remarkable, being moreover the most
+ancient in the world, the Chinese in the Western States have not as
+yet taken to indulge in the luxury of strikes. As domestic servants,
+nurses, and attendants on children, they appear to be affectionate
+and careful; and nothing could be better than the service of the hotel
+in which we were lodged, the great portion of which was carried on by
+Chinamen and women.
+
+_June 10th._--In the spacious courtyard of the Palace Hotel, at
+7 o'clock this morning, there might have been observed three
+well-appointed waggons (as Americans call the vehicle more
+appropriately termed "spider" at the Cape), each with two horses
+of race, fast trotters, panting for a spin through the city and the
+Park out to the shores of the Pacific. The Duke and Sir H. Green and
+Mr. Stephen were driven by Mr. Howard. Mr. Wright was "personally
+conducted" by Mr. ----, and I was put behind a pair of as handsome
+chestnuts as could well be seen anywhere, of which the owner and
+driver (General Barnes) was very reasonably proud. The streets of
+San Francisco, like those of most of the American cities we have
+visited, are atrociously paved; the torture of driving over boulders
+is aggravated by the sharp ribs of the tram ways, so that it is not
+pleasant, if, indeed, it be possible, to drive rapidly till the limit
+of municipal incompetence or fraud be passed. But once out on the
+suburbs the chestnuts were invited to step it, and were bowling along
+at a good fourteen miles an hour on our way to the Park, over as good
+a road as horse or man ever felt under hoof or foot. The Park not long
+ago was a waste of sand, it is now swarded and planted with shrubs, and
+luxuriant with flowers. Notices that it was unlawful to do more than
+ten miles an hour were posted up, but the General did not pay strict
+attention to them till he came near shady places, where experience
+warned him that policemen might be lying privily in ambush. The pace
+was quickened till the waggon seemed to fly through the air rather
+than move over the ground. It was the perfection of travelling on
+wheels--almost as buoyant as a headlong gallop. The waggon weighed but
+180 lb., the powerful animals "scarcely felt it more than their tails."
+I had a turn at the reins by "kind permission" of the General. The art
+of driving trotters needs practice. You must keep a strong, steady
+pull on the head, or they "break." Very soon I had the satisfaction
+of making the chestnuts break the law with a vengeance, and of hearing
+the General say, "We are just within the three minutes! not ten seconds
+inside it!"--that is, of trotting at the rate of just twenty miles an
+hour. Up hill and down hill, and along the flat out of the Park and
+over the smooth road, and in half an hour the Pacific was in sight, and
+the murmurs of the surf rose above the rhythm of the regular beat of
+the eight hoofs in front of us! Cliff House was in view. Seal Rocks,
+in their setting of foam, lay before us, and in forty minutes from the
+time we left the hotel, despite policemen, miles of bad pavements, and
+tramways, we drew up at the steps of Cliff House, nine miles from San
+Francisco, and the trotters had not turned a hair. From the verandah
+at the sea front of the hotel, we enjoyed for half an hour a spectacle
+which is, as far as I know, unique. At the distance of 500 or 600 yards
+from the beach at our feet there is a group of four very rugged rocks,
+with serrated edges and tops, the sides broken here and there into
+ledges and small platforms. They are too small to be called islands,
+the largest being, as it seemed, not 100 yards wide. The slopes are
+not, I think, so steep as they looked on the land side. On the two
+largest of these rocks there were herds of sea-lions, so close that we
+could see, through very poor opera-glasses, with the greatest ease,
+their eyes, teeth, and whiskers, as they reposed or played with each
+other. Some had clambered to the highest ledges, escalading the sides
+by a series of painful-looking struggles with their flappers; others
+were fast asleep in cosy nooks; some were tossing their heads about and
+making believe to bite each other in sport; the younger ones were bent
+on teasing their fathers and mothers by uncouth gambols. As they played
+or moved they uttered cries between a bark and a roar; now and then the
+noise was like that of a pack of hounds in full cry, and the effect of
+the strange sound mingling with the tumult of the surf and the beat of
+the waves was most singular and "eldrich." Those fresh from the sea
+were shining black, but became lighter as they dried. The older ones
+were not darker than cinnamon bears or unwashed sheep. As many of those
+on the rocks had not long left the water the general effect of the
+herd put one in mind of a gathering of enormous slugs on cabbages--not
+a poetic simile, but a just one, I think. Occasionally a sea-lion,
+hungry or bored by his companions, threw himself with a splash into the
+wave, and it was interesting to watch the rapidity and actual grace of
+his movements in the sea compared with his laborious efforts on the
+land. One could see them quite clearly through the body of the heavy
+billows; occasionally a bold one would glide close on shore and fish
+in the edge of the surf, raising his head and shoulders clear above
+the surface, and then diving out of sight. They were cruising about
+in every direction. You remember the sea-lion at the Zoo, of which the
+French attendant was so fond? Well, the creatures below and before us
+were most of them double the size of that fellow, and several exceeded
+the largest ox in size. The monsters are quite well known; one is named
+Ben Butler, "because he is such a great beast." They were formerly
+protected by law, but some one thought they killed too many fish, and
+the law was repealed. They are safe all the same, for there is a law
+against the discharge of firearms within 300 yards of an inhabited
+dwelling; Cliff House throws its ægis over the sea-lions in that wise;
+but the quantity of fish which must be devoured by these mountainous
+phocæ (an they be so) daily would maintain a decently-sized city. The
+hide furnishes the "sealskin" used to cover trunks, and the body yields
+oil fat, and the tusks are close, white, and hard. These sea-lions
+breed far away up north, and come with their young regularly every
+year to the same resorts; but incessant war is waged upon them by the
+sealers and whalers, so that the chances are against the beast where he
+is not protected by law, and their numbers do not increase. Altogether,
+the spectacle was one never to be forgotten. A hotel, with oysters
+awaiting us for a forebreakfast refection in the background, waggons
+from Michigan, horses from Kentucky, all the apparatus of civilised
+life close at hand, the Pacific and its strange wild denizens at our
+feet! "Let us turn in and have an oyster." "What! oysters in June?"
+"Yes, and good ones too." In this favoured land oysters are in season
+all the year round. There are no oysters found on the coast, I am told,
+and they will not breed. They are brought all the way from the Atlantic
+coast when they are mere oysterlets, and they are laid down in the
+Pacific, where they grow fat and large, but are not "crossed in love,"
+and therefore are fit to be eaten from January to January. They are
+about the size of a spring chicken, and need some courage on the part
+of an assailant who desires to dispose of them as he would a native.
+
+This was our last day in the city of the Golden Gate, and the
+photographers were masters of the situation; and there was much
+_débris_ of sight-seeing to sweep up--visits to be made, shops to be
+inspected, among which I must mention specially the Diamond Palace
+of Colonel Andrews, one of the handsomest jeweller's "stores" in
+the world, though it is not as large as the establishments of the
+principal firms in London, Paris, Vienna, or as Tiffany's in New
+York. The distinctive feature of the interior is the decoration of the
+paintings of fair women, on the ceiling and the walls above the cases,
+by necklaces, diadems, zones, and other feminine ornaments of real
+diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and pearls. The pictures are the work of
+an Italian artist of merit, and the general effect is very striking;
+but I doubt whether it is a good way of inducing people to buy the
+articles which bedeck the ideal beauties. At Bradley and Rulofson's
+we saw photographs of many of our friends, and had one more proof of
+the smallness of the world. Every one we knew seemed to have visited
+San Francisco. There we all submitted to inevitable fate, and left our
+negatives behind us, but the Duke was captured by a rival photographic
+institution, and had a sitting all to himself.
+
+The aspect of a crowd in a large American city differs from that of
+the passers-by in the street of an English town, most of all in the
+appearance of such a large proportion of coloured people. Here it may
+be said, however, that they are colourless, as the prevailing hue of
+the foreign population is that of the Chinaman. In Canada the number
+of negroes, or of persons of negro descent, of varying gradations of
+colour, is remarkable, considering the circumstances, but they probably
+may be accounted for by the emigration in the olden times of those
+who were escaping from slavery, or who went with their masters and
+employers into the Dominion. In the cities on the Lakes I was very
+much struck by the persons of undoubted African descent who are to
+be met with in the streets in great numbers; and in Chicago there is
+a quarter nearly exclusively occupied by them--honest, industrious,
+hard-working people seemingly, given to stand about at the street
+corners, however, a good deal on Sundays, and cultivating a bright
+attire, especially on the part of the ladies, whose bonnets and
+shawls were things to wonder at. There are loafers amongst them, as
+there are amongst their betters; but, taking them all in all, in the
+Northern, Western, and Atlantic States, they are a decidedly useful
+element in the population, easing the burden of labour to the white
+man, and following many occupations, such as those of waiters, barbers,
+bricklayers, and labourers in the less skilled sort of work, for which
+it would be difficult to find American substitutes. One peculiarity,
+which may be accounted for by some wiser person than myself, seems to
+be their recklessness as to what they put on their heads. Whether it
+is merely a compliance with the custom of the white man, which impels
+them to cover the highly effective protection against sun and cold
+which Nature has given them, or not; or whether it is that the canons
+of taste in such matters have not yet settled down to those accepted
+by people in civilised life in the Western world, the male negro has
+the most extraordinary indifference as to the quality and shape of the
+thing which he calls a hat or cap, and it would not be easy to find out
+of the gutters of some Irish country town anything more dilapidated,
+battered, and utterly incoherent than some of the hats which one may
+see on the heads of people of colour, especially down South. Whatever
+other virtues they may have, neatness is not amongst them; for, with
+all their affectation of finery, their clothes are generally ill-kept,
+their houses are unkempt, and, where they are cultivators of the soil,
+the operations are performed in a slovenly manner. The traditions of
+the old plantation have descended upon them, and influence them.
+
+On my way from Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the bankers in Montgomery
+Street--I believe the former of these gentlemen has had the
+privilege of giving his name to steamers and cities, leastways
+railway stations--I saw a party of sailors belonging to the United
+States steamer "_Rodgers_," now about to proceed in search of the
+"_Jeannette_," and I was much struck by their resemblance to our own
+bluejackets in general "cut of the jib," dress, face, and figure.
+They were in charge of a smart-looking officer, and had been paying a
+farewell visit to the fruit and vegetable markets--one of the sights of
+the city. They were in high good-humour, laughing and chatting loudly,
+more than is the wont of Americans, and I could not but contrast
+their fine physique with that of the soldiers we had seen at Sir Henry
+Green's parade when General McDowell took us round the harbour. The
+detachment at the Fort, consisting of infantry and artillerymen, and
+squads of different regiments, had some weedy veterans in the ranks,
+who had lost their setting up and did not look fit for much work; but
+the sailors, probably a picked lot, were good all round.
+
+_À propos_ of Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the number of wealthy
+men in San Francisco of Irish origin or nationality is remarkable.
+Millionaires with names of Milesian prefixes and terminations are
+phenomenal. We had intended to return to the East Coast by way of Utah,
+and to stay a day or two at Salt Lake City, but the railroad company
+did not consider it expedient to give the party the facilities which
+had been accorded in every other instance by the American authorities
+to the Duke and his friends. To have gone round Salt Lake City would
+have cost a couple of hundred pounds more for haulage, and we were
+much more interested in seeing Leadville and Denver than the City of
+the Mormons; the game was not thought to be worth the candle, and
+it was resolved that we would go back as we came, in charge of the
+representatives of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad Company.
+It was only one item more in the long list of things we ought to have
+seen if we could, and I can safely say that we had a large share of the
+common experience of travellers in regard to the relations between the
+possible and the impossible in the course of a journey in a strange
+land, where there are for ever cropping up representations that "you
+really ought not to leave without seeing" so and so. The evening of our
+last day was passed in the society of General McDowell, Mr. Morgan,
+the English Consul, Colonel Bee, and others, who had done so much to
+make the visit to San Francisco all that could be desired, and whose
+courtesy and kindness will ever be remembered by every one of us most
+gratefully. Like Sir Charles Coldstream, we "had seen everything,
+done everything," but, unlike him, had found there was plenty in it.
+The street railway--most ingenious and successful, invaluable in a
+hilly city like Lisbon--the Chinese Theatre, the Joss houses--shops,
+eating-houses, opium dens of the Chinese quarter, the clubs, the
+principal buildings, the streets, the shops, the markets, the harbour,
+the suburbs, and country round about--all had been inspected, and
+yet each day we were told that we were doing positive injustice to
+ourselves and to the objects which were perforce neglected. In the
+morning there was a levée in the hotel to bid the Duke good-bye and
+see the party start on their return journey. At the very last moment a
+gentleman came forward with a proposal to take us to the North Pole by
+balloon, but there was not time to consider it in all its bearings and
+the offer was declined with thanks. We started at 10 A.M., and the Duke
+was attended to the boat and to the station across the water by a large
+body of San Franciscans, who took leave ere the train started. The
+gentlemen who were with us on the journey westwards attended the Duke
+on his way towards the Eastern States. All day we travelled through
+California--"the hot furnace"--which at first, however, proved to be
+only very warm, and the coloured servants had constant supplies of iced
+compounds to be drunk for the solace of the homeward bound, and had
+laid in a stock of San Franciscan luxuries to soothe the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Cañon.
+
+
+_June 12th._--The train stopped at Los Angeles at six in the morning,
+and, drawing up my window-blind, the first person I saw on the platform
+was our good friend Colonel Baker, who had come to meet us, intent
+on the good offices which he could render during our stay. These were
+exhibited in the form of a beautiful bouquet for Lady Green, baskets
+of limes and oranges, and great bunches of grapes. In this happy valley
+there are cares as in the rest of the world. The Colonel told us he was
+in the midst of a great litigation affecting his claim to a large tract
+of land in which there are said to exist the richest tin-mines in the
+American Continent. Yet why should he care about his tin-mine? There
+were rolling acres rich with corn and fruit, and there were flocks and
+herds and vineyards, and a charming home of his own. Nevertheless, if
+the want of that tin-mine made him at all unhappy, I am sure those who
+were indebted to him, as we were, for so many kindnesses, will wish his
+claim to be triumphantly asserted, and long possession of all that is
+to follow.
+
+I dreaded the passage of the Desert to Yuma; and indeed the heat was
+intense. No wonder that with the thermometer ranging from 100° to 104°,
+all the blinds in the car were pulled down, and we sprawled listlessly
+on the cushions. Our excellent attendants put forth all the resources
+of art in the shape of ice and preparations of limes and cocktails;
+but the temperature would not be baffled. We could just read, and were
+aware that we were living, and some of us had strength enough now and
+then to execute forays against flies with napkins to drive them out
+of the carriages. How could people live out in the open, and work in
+the mines, or pursue any out-of-door employment in such torrid heat?
+Nevertheless, there was a marked distinction between it and the heat to
+be endured with the mercury at an equal height in India.
+
+The speed of the train was very respectable--somewhat over twenty miles
+an hour--and at that rate we ran from San Gorgonio and Banning on to
+Cabazon, through a flat plain, dry and burnt up, very like the desert
+around Suez, and fringed, like it, with rocky and rugged hills, save
+that there was a great growth of Spanish bayonets and cactuses of all
+kinds among the stones and sand, and that snow was to be seen on all
+the hill-tops in the distance. For 107 miles there was no water to
+be met with going along this plain; but the mirage, of which I have
+spoken in the account of our journey to San Francisco, was frequent
+and beautiful; and again I was fascinated by the sight of lovely lakes
+embowered in trees, with stately cities on their shores, changing and
+shifting and melting away, only again to assume apparent substance to
+cheat the senses.
+
+Once the train stopped to allow the passengers to visit the
+mud-geysers, which were not more than 150 yards on the left of the
+line, and with commendable curiosity most of us got out and walked
+over the baked earth to the spot. There was no mark whatever of smoke
+or vapour to indicate the place; and it was almost startling to come
+suddenly upon a kind of pond of semi-liquid mud, fifty or sixty feet
+in diameter, on which huge bubbles, varying in size from an orange to
+a hogshead, were continually forming and bursting. There was a faint
+sulphurous smell, and the ground around the liquefied portion of the
+surface, where the bubbles were breaking, was hot and cracked. The
+conductor said that all attempts to reach the bottom of the holes
+through which the bubbles arose had failed. Two of these geysers
+were in active operation, and the plain away to the left of the rail
+was said to contain a great number of them. After all it was very
+unsatisfactory to see this ebullition going on without being able to
+account for it; and, generally, I think we thought less of each other
+and of our information after visiting them, and finding out that not
+one of us had any theory on the subject which would bear either fire or
+water.
+
+I do not think I ever saw a sunset more beautiful than that which
+marked the close of this day--certainly not in India or South Africa,
+nor on the prairie, for which they make claims of surpassing beauty in
+the matter of sunsets. As it died out, I felt that "thing of beauty"
+could not "be a joy for ever," for it was a combination of colour and
+of form, including sky and mountain, that it would be impossible to see
+again.
+
+The kindness of which we have had so many proofs, has followed,
+accompanied, and preceded us all unremittingly and unweariedly. A
+rough with some Bourbon on board mounted to-day the steps of the
+car at a station, and insisted on seeing "this Duke." When he was
+told that the object of his attention was engaged, he said, "This
+is a land of liberty (as in his case it was), and he doesn't want a
+bodyguard with him!" But the conductor sent him away about his business
+without trouble. On the platform at Benson a few miners asked "the
+Duke to come out and show himself." The people at the stations were
+generally satisfied with a quiet peep; now and then an enthusiastic
+Scotchman claimed a shake hands, which was always accorded to him. A
+sleeper placed across the rails (accounted for by the officers on the
+hypothesis that some loafer without a ticket had been turned off by the
+conductor, and had put the sleeper in the way of the train to wreak
+his vengeance--a thing which has occurred nearer home) was the only
+substantial danger to which we were here exposed.
+
+The heat (June 13th) was intense. The thermometer rose to 105 at one
+o'clock in the day, and it was little comfort to us to be told that at
+Deming it had been up to 110 the day before.
+
+For some days we have been supping full of horrors, indeed
+breakfasting and dining on them, for the papers contain accounts of
+the extraordinary homicides all about this region. Tucson, Benson,
+Wilcox--all these places were resounding with the exploits of "Billy
+the Kid." Now at Tucson there is, I believe, a man whose name was once
+amongst the very foremost in the United States. Who some twenty years
+and more ago had not heard of General Fremont, "the Pathfinder," the
+adventurous traveller, the energetic politician, the dashing soldier?
+He had gone at the outbreak of the war to take up the chief command
+in the west with all the pomp and circumstance of glorious war. I was
+somewhat astonished to find that he was at Tucson, the governor of the
+Territory, on a humble salary, apparently the world-forgetting and
+the world-forgot, while "Billy-the-Kid" was perpetrating numberless
+atrocities under his nose, and Mr. Pat Garrett was dressing up his
+loins with his revolver-belt, and about to go forth with a chosen band
+of citizens and seek the redoubtable William.[A]
+
+A person who has only seen settled States in Europe, or the Eastern
+States of the North American Continent, cannot form any notion of a
+territory which has become a centre of attraction to all the wild
+adventurers and daring spirits which society, in the process of
+formation, throws out as a sort of advanced guard. In Arizona, in
+1870, according to the American Almanac, out of a total population
+of 9658, 2729 could not write and 2690 could not read. Of the total
+population, 2491 were foreign born, and 2753 were natives, the rest
+being coloured or under ten years of age. In New Mexico, out of 91,000
+people, 48,000 over ten years of age could not read, and 51,000 whites
+over ten years of age could not write. It may be inferred from such
+figures what is the general condition of the labouring classes in these
+States and Territories. The inhabitants of these States have doubled
+in the last ten years. They are filling up at a rate inconceivably
+great--so great, indeed, that American newspapers are fairly bewildered
+and American statesmen appalled by the rush across the Rocky Mountains
+and down the rivers, although as yet but a small proportion of the
+immense stream of immigrants has flooded the outlying territories. "At
+this rate," exclaims a Western editor, "the old monarchies of Europe
+will soon be depopulated." When Mr. Lincoln, in 1861, addressed his
+inaugural to the expectant States he expressed his confident belief
+that there were children then born who would live to see the flag of
+the Union floating over no less than 100,000,000 of human beings. The
+recent census of the United States gives a return of 51,000,000 of
+people, but the most eminent statisticians have arrived at the belief
+that the progress and increase of the States will not be at the same
+rapid rate as that which marked the history of the Republic since the
+cessation of the great civil war. It may be fairly inferred, however,
+that at the end of this century the population of the United States
+will greatly exceed that of Russia, or that of any empire except
+China and Great Britain, including Hindostan. The population, on
+each period of ten years, has increased at an average of more than
+30 per cent.; in fact, nearer 33 per cent., and the centre of it has
+travelled westward at the rate of more than fifty miles every ten
+years, till the centre of population is now eight miles west by south
+from Cincinnati. In 1800 the Union extended over only 239,935 square
+miles. Its flag now floats over 1,272,239 square miles of States and
+over 1,800,000 square miles of Territory governed by the central power
+at Washington. "We cannot think," exclaims a Republican writer, "that
+the war of rebellion settled all our troubles and made us secure in
+our Republic. This enormous growth of the practically unknown West
+reveals to us the grave dangers that threaten our nation. We meet
+there the tremendous influences of alien races and alien religions."
+The Americans of New England and of the Eastern States do not feel
+anxious on that score, because their institutions are thoroughly
+founded, their character formed, and they trust to the great power of
+accomplished facts to assimilate the alien elements and sustain the
+fabric of the Republic. The bugbear of a great Chinese immigration
+has ceased to practically influence Californian politics, and it may
+be safely assumed that the bulk of the future immigrants from the
+Celestial Empire will only come from the same sources as those which
+have hitherto supplied the stream. No wonder, however, that thoughtful
+Americans--and there are many who think of the future of their country
+as something quite apart from dollars--are filled with grave anxieties
+when they see such floods of purely foreign material, which will in
+all probability exercise a preponderating influence over the politics
+of the Great Republic, surging into the States. Particularly have the
+home missionary clergy, as they are styled, been struck by the enormous
+influence which this foreign immigration has exercised. According
+to one authority, the Rev. Mr. Stimson, of Worcester, "it is not a
+question of spreading any particular form of Christianity or of Church
+government, but a momentous struggle of American institutions with
+alien civilisations and religions for the control of the great Western
+country. The problem is not a matter of cleaning door-yards, but of
+saving a continent for freedom." The Chinese Question and the Indian
+Question are, they think, as nothing compared with the Irish Question
+and the German Question. "The Republic," we are told, "stands on a
+foundation as broad as humanity itself," whatever that may mean, "but
+its condition of existence is a universal regard for the interests of
+all." Often during the course of the Duke of Sutherland's excursion
+it was our good fortune to fall in with men of great political and
+social knowledge. The future of the Republic is, in the mind of these
+men, clouded with uncertainty and doubt. They are apprehensive of
+some unknown danger. It may be corruption of political life leading
+to want of faith in free institutions; it may be the rival energies
+and the opposing interests which Washington foresaw as likely to array
+the East against the West--the Atlantic States against the inland
+States, and it is calculated by some sanguine people that before this
+century is over there will be eighteen, or possibly twenty, States
+admitted into the Union formed out of the Territories which are now
+under the central Government at Washington. Upon such influences as
+these alien immigration may be expected to act with prodigious power.
+At a recent meeting in Springfield a clergyman gave as an illustration
+of the absolute indifference of the foreign immigrants to Republican
+institutions a conversation he had with a Norwegian minister in
+Minneapolis. "There is nothing," said this gentleman, "in America which
+we Norwegians regard as of value except your land and your money. We
+do not want to learn English: we do not want to know the Americans
+around us; we have certainly no notion of becoming Americans, but we
+intend to remain as we are--Norwegians." The Mormons control Utah. They
+boast that they will soon govern five of the most important territorial
+regions beyond the Rockies. But if Utah becomes a State, as she hopes
+to do, she will found a Mormon code of laws and institutions beyond the
+power of the United States to control. New Mexico may be considered as
+a Roman Catholic State under the control of an excellent archbishop. Of
+course all prophecies may be falsified by events, but judging by the
+eighty years which have elapsed of the present century, and from the
+ratio of increase in that time in the United States, the most liberal
+construction may be placed even upon the bounding estimates of American
+politicians and statists. When we look to the Far West and see, for
+instance, how Winnipeg has become the centre of a great network of
+river navigation, 300 miles in one direction, 600 miles in another,
+and that the Mackenzie River passes for 1200 miles through what is
+declared to be the future wheat region of the world, we may easily
+comprehend the anxiety with which the patriotic American is filled lest
+the future of such a State should fall into hands antagonistic to the
+principles in which his _beau idéal_ of government has been founded and
+has prospered.
+
+_June 14._--At Lamy, a station named after the good archbishop of Santa
+Fé, where we halted for a short time whilst the passengers of another
+train were breakfasting, a citizen came up to me on the platform and
+exclaimed, as if he were very much impressed by the news he was going
+to give, "If you look in there, sir, you will see Bob Ingersoll at
+breakfast!" I asked whether there was anything very remarkable about
+the fact. "Well, sir," he said, "he is Colonel Ingersoll, of whom you
+have heard. He is the most remarkable in-fidel in the United States,
+and I really think he believes what he preaches. A good man to look at,
+too, and, they say, first-rate in his family." I had a glance at the
+believer in unbelief, and saw a very presentable-looking person, of
+fine appearance and good features, busily engaged in making the most
+of his time at one of the tables in the refreshment-room. He was the
+observed of all observers, and appeared to like it; and I understood
+from one of the crowd that he had just returned from inspecting some
+mining ventures in which he was concerned; for, if he does not believe
+in the world to come, he is credited with very strong faith in the
+excellencies of the possession of wealth in the world that is. His
+lectures are attended by crowded audiences, but, as an astute American
+observed, "they won't come to much, for, after all, people who do
+not believe anything can never get up a great enthusiasm. It is in
+believing something that the populace has faith."
+
+Once more our eyes were rejoiced with the sight of the lovely plains
+of Las Vegas, wide-spreading fields decked with flowers and dotted with
+flocks, bordered with ranges of softly contoured mountains, the courses
+of the water streams indicated by bright vegetation and by growth of
+trees of many kinds. From Lamy (170 miles) there is a gradual rise to
+Raton, which we reached at 6.30 in the evening. The appearance of the
+region we traverse as the train approaches the Raton Pass presents
+a strong contrast to the desolate country through which we have been
+passing. From Raton the train was drawn by two engines in front and
+shoved by one behind, and even then the pace was not very rapid, for
+the ascent is very sharp. All the more could we enjoy a very glorious
+sunset, as we slowly ascended the mountain. Then darkness came on
+rapidly, and we slid down towards La Junta into the night, and were all
+fast asleep long before we arrived there. In the very early morning,
+on June 15th, some two hours after midnight, we halted for a time at
+Pueblo. At 9 o'clock we had to leave our beloved Pullman and change the
+cars, for we were to take a fresh point of departure, starting from
+the Union Depôt upon the Denver and Rio Grande narrow-gauge railway
+for Denver, 119 miles distant, and making an excursion on the way to
+Manitou, to which we diverged from Colorado Springs: for to go within
+reach of that famous resort and not to see it would have been a great
+outrage on all the rules and regulations established for the observance
+of travellers. Certes narrow-gauge railways need an apology. Their
+_raison d'être_ is, at the best, that they are better than nothing.
+"If you won't have us, you can have nothing else." And in such a
+mountainous region as we were about to visit, the difficulties and
+expense connected with a broad-gauge line would have been enormous,
+if indeed it could be constructed at all. The narrow-gauge carriages,
+with seats to match, with which we were made acquainted for the first
+time, were of course much less commodious and comfortable than those
+we had quitted, but far superior to those on the Indian lines of the
+same gauge, and Indian engineers had been over to take a lesson from
+the Americans for the use of their carriage-builders. Atchison, Topeka,
+and Santa Fé Company and Denver and Rio Grande Company have been at
+daggers drawn and pistols cocked--ay, and fired--and at battles waged,
+in times gone by; and now our friends on the former line were, like
+ourselves, the guests of the latter, which was represented by several
+official gentlemen anxious to do the honours to the Duke. The scenery
+becomes grander and wilder every mile as the special hurries on as
+well as it can over the sinuous line, which is piercing a mountain
+region savage and sterile, and climbing by the sides of ravines and
+creeping upwards in rocky valleys with pine-clad hill-tops and frowning
+cliffs above. The engineer who designed the line is a Scotchman named
+McMurtrie--or at least of recent Scotch origin--and he seems to have a
+special gift for such aspiring work, and a gradient-compelling genius
+not to be baffled by altitudes. We were mounting towards the snows.
+Range upon range of whitened summits and hoary ridges came in view,
+all paying homage to the rugged crown of Pike's Peak, which can be
+seen from points more than 140 miles away. The fleecy cloudland which
+seemed to lie before us, as we looked away from Pueblo, was resolving
+itself into savage alps. And in these passes, which the eye caught for
+a moment, there might be El Dorados still undiscovered, for around us
+were cities springing out of the desert. Here the enchanter's wand is
+the explorer's pick, and no one could say where the precious ore might
+not be awaiting its touch. We were coming to the Land of Promises. The
+conversation of our new friends, among whom were some gentlemen of the
+press, related mostly to mines, and one of them had, as we discovered,
+a very certain investment at the disposal of the Duke, in the form of a
+mining-claim, which was worth, at the lowest computation, twice as much
+as he was willing to take for it. There was no reason to doubt his good
+faith, but it was felt that it was a kind of fortune which ought not to
+pass into the hands of strangers, and should be reserved for the people
+of the country; and I am sure all of the party who had the pleasure of
+the owner's acquaintance hope that he has "made his pile" out of it,
+and has more than realised his expectations.
+
+Colorado Springs, forty-five miles from Pueblo, is nearly 6000 feet
+above the level of the sea. The character of the line to it is best
+described in the fact that the average grade per mile is 44·14, the
+maximum curvature 6°. There are "no Springs" here, but the little town,
+charmingly situated, is a halting-place much frequented in tourist-time
+by travellers, and reputed to be healthful. There are some pleasant
+houses visible from the station, at which we descended to take our
+places in the carriages provided to take us to Manitou Springs, five
+miles away. Mr. Palmer--if General, I beg his pardon--the President of
+the Railroad, had important business to attend to, but he was so well
+represented by Mr. Bell, the Vice-President, that no one regretted his
+absence, and it cannot be said in his case _les absents ont toujours
+tort_. He is reported to have made a very large fortune with much
+ingenuity, and to have business talents which even in this country
+excite admiration. Mr. Bell is an Irish gentleman, a member of the
+medical profession, who has a delightful villa embowered in a garden
+in the environs of Manitou, where the Duke and his friends found a
+charming interior and an Irish-American welcome, and discovered that
+strawberries and cream were almost as good in Colorado as in Covent
+Garden. A quaint, odd place, Manitou--an American Martigny, with
+Pike's Peak rising (14,300 feet above the sea) over it in the clear
+sky, inspiring regret that we could not make the excursion to the
+summit, which is rewarded, we were told, and I can believe, by one of
+the grandest views in the world--the usual service of guides, horses,
+and mules, and _calèches_--a naturalist's store with skins, minerals,
+feathers, and stuffed "objects"--detached wooden houses and villas
+in small plots of garden--a straggling street, and large hotels for
+invalids. But there was the unusual feature of encampments here and
+there by the roadside, and notices forbidding the pitching of tents
+within certain limits which were explained by the fact that the high
+reputation of the waters and air induces people to come from great
+distances for the treatment of consumption, and diseases of throat and
+lungs. Many of them find it cheaper to travel in horse waggons and
+pitch their canvas dwellings when they wish to make a halt, than to
+take up their quarters at hotels. Poor people! what pale, hectic cheeks
+and wasted forms we saw; little groups picnicking by the sides of the
+rivulets along the roads--each with a gnawing care--anxiety about some
+dear one's health in the midst of them. Our driver, an intelligent,
+chatty lad, was full of information, and we had to drive the prescribed
+road by the wells out to the Ute Pass, a mountain-gorge wild enough--a
+small _Tête Noire_--to points to which magniloquent names have been
+given.
+
+It is not for want of what is called puffing that Americans neglect
+the resorts of health of their own country, and in the States far and
+wide the beauties and advantages of Manitou are blazoned forth on the
+walls of hotels and in guide-books to all who can read. I may confess
+now that, notwithstanding the magnificent altitude of Pike's Peak, and
+the eccentric forms of the rocks in the "Garden of the Gods," I was
+disappointed with Manitou. But then the visit was short, and the day
+was hot, and the way was long and dusty, and haply it might be that
+under different circumstances Manitou would deserve much warmer praise.
+It possesses indeed an abundance of curious springs, said to be full
+of health-giving properties; and in the course of our drive we halted
+several times to partake of drinks from various springs, out of one of
+which bubbled up very good soda-water, precisely like Schweppe's best
+in taste and appearance. At the large hotel, which put one in mind of
+the great establishments of the same sort in Switzerland, the water
+served at table to the guests--a sort of pleasant Apollinaris-tasting
+beverage--came from a natural fountain.
+
+The "cataract" nearly made us angry, and there was no regret felt when
+the carriages returned to the hotel, where there was unwonted activity
+and bustle, as the "Denver Zouaves" had just descended in a friendly
+razzia on it, and were desolating the hearts and fireside resources of
+Manitou. The consequences might have been serious, as it turned out,
+to unoffending strangers. Those who needed it turned into the barber's
+shop of the hotel to be shaved, and after some delay a coloured man
+appeared, who began to try his hand on me. Fortunately it was not
+'prentice, for it was very unsteady, and I became a little alarmed
+for my cuticle. "It will be all right, mister," quoth the barber. "I
+never cut any one. But I'm demoralised, dat's a fact, having to wait
+on dem Denver Zouaves. Lor a messy on any enemy dey has! My nerve's
+all gone to pieces wid their wantin' everting at once at the dinner!"
+The hotel seemed far more clean and comfortable than the caravanserais
+in the land of William Tell; but our stay was short, for we were put
+under orders for a sight which has the most inappropriate name that
+could be invented--a valley in which the most extraordinary-looking
+columns carved out in a plateau by the agency of water, have been
+left standing, detached and in groups, to which the visitor enters
+through a cleft in a barrier of rock passing round the base of a pillar
+of sandstone as high as a house. The "Garden of the Gods" contains
+500 acres, and is surrounded by mountains and cliffs. The sandstone
+pillars generally taper from the base upwards to a short distance from
+the tops, which are flattened out or surmounted by slabs or blocks of
+sandstone of fantastic outline, and they are called by names derived
+from fancied likenesses to animals, birds, and men. The juxtaposition
+of the most brilliantly hued, dazzling-red blocks and strata, with
+masses of the same material of milky whiteness, gives the impression
+that the scene is the work of human hands; it seems too quaint and
+artificial for the hand of Nature, to which alone it is due; and the
+vegetation and the trees are in keeping with the character of the
+place. A trysting-place for geologists, and their happy hunting-ground,
+no doubt. But why "the Garden of the Gods," I pray?
+
+From the valley or cup, emerging by another road, the driver took us to
+a ravine-like recess, almost girt in by high wooded mountains, in which
+Mr. (General?) Palmer is erecting a mansion of palatial importance--a
+picturesque site surely--cliffs, forests, and mountain all around, and
+in view one most singular sandstone pillar, named the Major Domo, 120
+feet high and only 30 feet round--a mountain stream brawling through
+tangled brushwood glades--a garden. But the heat! That must prove a
+terror by day to the inmates of Glen Eyrie Lodge or Castle--which, by
+the by, was named, as one of us insisted, from a collection of rubbish
+on a ledge in the face of one of the cliffs, which was, he maintained,
+the nest of an eagle. It was now time to return to our train, and we
+were not sorry to get back to Colorado Springs.
+
+From Colorado Springs to our destination at Denver there were still 75
+miles of rail, and the line continued to ascend till we reached Divide
+(7186 feet), whence there was a gentle descent. There were sixteen
+stations named on the time-table. We stopped at very few of them,
+and travelled somewhat too fast to permit our placid enjoyment of the
+scenery, austere and vast, which indeed deserved more attention than
+could be given to it by passengers in a very lively train--endless
+alps on alps, not sheeted with perpetual white, but rather flecked
+with snowfields, which contrasted finely with the sombre pine-forests,
+and the rich hues of the rocks, touched by the rays of the setting
+sun, that, ere it slid behind the mountains, cast a rose-coloured
+mantle on their summit. The evidences of a bustling city were not
+wanting in the approaches to the capital of Colorado. There were tall
+chimneys vomiting out smoke in the distance, and near at hand trains
+of waggons were toiling over the dusty plain--still 5000 feet above
+the sea-level--fast trotters and people on horseback, beer-gardens,
+factories of all kinds, brick-kilns, and then a fringe of log houses
+and wooden shanties, before the train stopped at the imposing and
+substantial depot.
+
+It was a quarter-past eight, nearly dark, when we reached Denver,
+and glad were we to get into the hall of the Windsor Hotel, which was
+crowded with a mixed multitude--miners, and speculators, and traders,
+and some travellers like ourselves--a very busy scene indeed. In the
+hotel were all human comforts nearly; hot and cold baths, and good
+rooms, and more appliances of civilised existence, for those who could
+pay for them, than could be found in many hostelries of approved
+reputation in venerable towns at home; moreover, exuberant offers
+of help and information. One goes to bed laden with obligations and
+heavy with the sense of favours which can never be repaid. There was
+now a _soupçon_ of frost in the air, and notwithstanding the heat
+which we had endured the greater part of the day, fires were not
+ungrateful; and as we peered out of our windows over the roofs of the
+wide-spread houses of the town, we could see the snow on the lofty
+ranges of hills, watered by the South Platte River and Cherry Creek,
+which surround the cup in which Denver has been built in obedience
+to the impulses of the increasing population, which now numbers, I
+believe, 38,000 souls. There was a bright glare from the gas-lighted
+streets, sounds of music, and a tumult of life in the town which
+would have been creditable to an ancient metropolis. In the morning
+from the hotel windows appeared a beautiful and widespread panorama
+of the hills we had seen the evening before, peak above peak, none
+very densely covered perhaps, or presenting continuous snowfields, but
+extending in billowy sweeps far away to the horizon, all capped with
+snow, now bathed in a flood of fervent sunshine, the snow lighted up
+by the peculiar crimson tints common in Alpine regions. There were
+duties in the way of sight-seeing and exploration of no ordinary
+nature to be done. First there were interviews and receptions, and the
+inevitable drive through the place as soon as the ordeal of breakfast
+was over; and ordeal in some sort it was for the strangers to file
+in to the public room and take their places at their table, aware
+that the morning papers had subjected them to exhaustive criticism,
+which was being verified by those around us. The morning papers too
+had given some topics for reflection, indications that in the newly
+created capital of Colorado desperate men, overtaken by the march of
+law and order, had refused to accept service, and were vindicating
+their rights as wild western outcasts to take or part with life as
+of yore, in reckless encounters and deliberate assassinations. There
+were, perhaps, at that moment some hundreds, if not thousands, out of
+the population of 37,000 or 38,000 of the city, who belonged to the
+adventurous classes--sporting-men, betting-men, ring-men, bar-keepers,
+hell-proprietors, and their satellites, and the scum of the saloons
+attracted from the great cities of the States for hundreds of miles,
+by the prey which miners with belts full of gold, half mad with drink,
+and always fond of excitement, frequently are; and if to these be added
+the dissolute loafers and broken-down mining speculators, the strength
+of the army arrayed against the law may be estimated; and the wonder is
+that among a population armed to the teeth there are not more cases of
+such violent deeds as we were reading of at breakfast. To the stranger
+there was no evidence of the existence of these disturbing elements,
+unless the bearded and booted men with speculation in their eyes,
+in the hotel passages and halls, belonged to the dangerous, as they
+certainly did to the mining, classes. As to the resources of the city,
+although for rapidity of growth its wonders may be eclipsed by those of
+Leadville, Denver claims a very high place in the catalogue of these
+marvellous fungi of civilisation, of which the Western States present
+almost unique examples. There is everything that any one can want to be
+had for money in the place, and much more than most people need. Paris
+fashions and millinery are in vogue. There are fine shops, handsome
+churches, a theatre, breweries, factories, banks, insurance offices.
+
+The principal street exhibits pretty young people, who would have
+no occasion to fear comparison with the _beau monde_ in Eastern
+or European capitals. The thoroughfares are crowded with vehicles,
+and spruce carriages and well turned-out horses may be seen in the
+favourite drive, that has been made over an indifferent road to the
+base of the Rocky Mountains, which appear to be close at hand, though
+they are thirteen miles away. But here and there in the well-dressed
+crowd may be seen a Bohemian _pur sang_, or a miner in his every day
+clothes, bent on a rig out and a good time of it. The streets, unpaved,
+dusty, and rugged, are very wide, and bordered with trees, and the
+houses generally are built of good red brick instead of wood; and
+there are runnels of water like those one sees in Pretoria and other
+Dutch towns in South Africa. The roads about the city leave much to be
+desired; but Rome was not built in a day.
+
+There are many ready-made clothing establishments in the main streets,
+and there is a heavy trade in tinned provisions. Through the Western
+States, as in South Africa, the débris of provision-tins constitutes
+a certain and considerable addition to the objects to be seen in the
+vicinity of every house, and to the mounds of rubbish in the street of
+every village. How indeed could the first-comers in such regions keep
+body and soul together without the supplies in such a portable form
+of the first necessaries of life? Having once run up a town in these
+remote wastes, the inhabitants are still compelled to make a liberal
+use of the same sort of food, and mines of tinned iron gradually
+accumulate around them.
+
+Our first excursion was to the Argo Works, under very pleasant
+auspices, for we had the wife of the Senator, who is one of the
+principal partners, and Mrs. Pearce, whose husband is largely
+interested in the works, taking charge of us. The works are at some
+distance outside the town, but the lofty chimneys vomit out quite
+sufficient vaporous fumes and smoke to blight the vegetation and to
+give the people near at hand a taste of their quality. I am not going
+to give a minute description, for more reasons than one, of what we saw
+at the works; but it was a very interesting exhibition of the processes
+by which the precious metals are extracted from the ores and delivered
+to commerce. The Argo Works simply assay and reduce ores on commission,
+but the business is on a very large scale. Immense piles, in fact small
+mountains, of brown, cinnamon and earth coloured dust and rock were
+heaped up in the sheds, to be brought to the furnaces and turned, when
+divested of the lead, iron, copper, and gold, out in ingots of silver.
+All the methods for the extraction of silver were shown to us, but
+I committed a gross indiscretion when I asked, in my ignorance, "How
+do you extract the gold?" "That," said the urbane gentleman who was
+conducting us over the works, "we never permit strangers to see." So
+there is more there than meets the eye.
+
+The business of assaying here must be profitable, and if the reputation
+of any firm be once established there is a secure fortune for its
+members. The miners flock to them, and they can dictate terms. The
+extent of mining work in the country around may be inferred from the
+numerous offices in connection with it in the city. As a specimen
+of what Messrs. Bush and Tabor of our hotel give their guests for
+dinner, let me offer you this _menu_ of the 5.30 ordinary to-day
+(June 16). Soup, beef à l'Anglaise; fish, boiled trout, anchovy sauce;
+corned beef, leg of mutton, sirloin beef, chickens with giblet sauce,
+fricassee à la Toulouse, veal, kidneys sautés aux croûtons, rice,
+croquettes, baked pork and beans, saddle of antelope, currant jelly,
+lamb, tongue, chicken salad, spiced salmon; innumerable "relishes" and
+vegetables, baked rice pudding, strawberry pie, apricot pie, jelly,
+blancmange, vanilla ice cream, macaroons, pound cake, fruit, Swiss
+cheese, nuts, coffee, &c. The wines were not cheap: champagne 16_s._ a
+bottle, St. Julien 6_s._, Leoville 14_s._, sherry 8_s._, brandy 14_s._
+per bottle. Orders for "drinks" at the bar after dinner were much more
+general than orders for wine at dinner.
+
+Denver, in spite of its mineral wealth, is very poor, however, in
+that of which the want would make life, even in America, intolerable.
+The supply of drinking-water is scanty and bad, and last year there
+was nearly a water famine. The _cartes_ in the hotel announced "Water
+used in this room is boiled and filtered." But great efforts have been
+made to furnish the inhabitants with a store, constant and adequate,
+of the precious fluid, and we saw very considerable works, the
+property of an Irish gentleman, erected before the town attained its
+present dimensions, which were to be supplemented by a new enterprise
+respecting which we heard much. Perhaps no town of equal size in an
+equal length of time has ever had so much money and money's worth
+flowing in and through it as Denver since the Colorado mines were
+worked. It is asserted that the trade of the town for 1881 will exceed
+8,000,000_l._ Colorado in 1879 yielded ores to the value of more than
+3,750,000_l._ The output in the present year will exceed that of 1880.
+In that year $35,417,517 worth of gold and $20,183,889 of silver (more
+than 11,000,000_l._) was deposited in the United States Mint and Assay
+Office. There is, besides, vast wealth in flocks and herds, and Denver
+is the place where the people resort from Colorado for purposes of
+trade and pleasure; altogether an astounding place, with a future quite
+dazzling to think of, unless the mines give in, and even then Colorado
+cannot again be poor; its climate and scenery will always attract
+travellers, and its capacity for feeding sheep and cattle will secure
+its population. "And as to the beetle?" Why, no one would have anything
+to say to it. Nothing was known of it. There might be such things in
+other States. "And the name?" Probably it was a red-coloured bug, and
+got the name Colorado just as the river, or tobacco, was called, from
+the hue of it. At all events the bug did not belong to the State.
+
+The interest which the progress of Colorado and the condition of
+society in the State excite was exemplified by the appearance in
+Denver of a party of Hungarian noblemen, whose names gave occasion
+for stumbling to the journalists who copied them out of the Hotel
+Register--Count Andrassy and others, who were travelling under the
+guidance of Dr. Rudolf Meyer, of Vienna. Although the air of Denver
+is so much bepraised, it happens that most of our party felt rather
+overcome at the end of our excursion through the town and the visit
+to the smelting works, and one of the Hungarians was confined to his
+room. However, they sallied out before dinner, and a gloomy prophet
+of evil remarked, "If these strangers should have a difficulty, I
+consider they'll hev only theirselves to blame. Some citizens don't
+like strangers comin' in and starin' at them, and they're apt to be
+awkward in their tempers in the afternoon." Knowing no danger, and
+fearing none, they went off, and were a long time absent. Meantime we
+were preparing for the road, as we were bound for Leadville, the city
+of the "biggest boom" of mining times--"the Silver El Dorado," as the
+guide-book, with a magnificent "bull," describes it. Our Hungarian
+friends returned to the hotel ere we left. They were filled with
+enthusiasm, and with a good deal also of curiosity in regard to the
+shootings of which they had heard so much, and were following in our
+track next day, and so we parted _sans adieux_. How the love of gold
+has filled these lone valleys with desperate men! "They are a rough
+lot, sure enough," said the landlord, "but lynching keeps them down;
+and it is much better than hanging according to law, to my mind. It
+certainly is cheaper." "How is it cheaper?" "Why," said he, "when a man
+is prosecuted, or when he is tried before the judges, the law expenses
+are heavy, and they fall on the county. When a man is lynched there is
+only the expense of the rope, and a little loss of time for the boys
+who do the job." From Denver to Pueblo and from Pueblo to Leadville
+the line is on the narrow-gauge principle, and our train, which left
+at seven o'clock in the evening, seemed to be driven on no principle at
+all; for, anxious to astonish a Duke perhaps, or Britishers generally,
+the driver did what certainly could not be called his level best to
+send us along up and down a very rough line, and round the sharpest
+curves, at the rate of forty miles an hour, so that when we turned
+in, our rest, if rest at all it were, was exceedingly broken, and
+we trundled about in our berths as if we were in a ship in a pretty
+heavy sea. Still this narrow-gauge was the only line which could be
+made through such a country as we were traversing. Peeps out of the
+window ever and anon revealed, high up amongst the stars, rugged
+mountain-tops, and for ever there came the sound of rushing water,
+near or remote, as the train "bounded" on its course. I do not know
+what stations we passed on our way, but the night was very long, and
+I greeted with pleasure the first gleam of light above the hill-tops.
+The Arkansas River was on our left, and at dawn we had glimpses of
+its turbid stream running madly in deep gorges far below us. At the
+South Arkansas station the train halted soon after daybreak, and then
+we diverged from the main line, and a light train took us over the
+Arkansas River by a fine bridge on its way up the Gunnison Extension
+to visit the highest mountain-pass traversed by a railway in the
+world. South Arkansas station is 217 miles from Denver, and is 6944
+feet--and Marshall Pass (25 miles away), to which we were bound, is
+10,760 feet--above sea-level. There were grades of 211 and curves of
+24° on the way, and the railroad twisted in and out among the ravines
+like an iron Alexandrine, for ever ascending till we had passed the
+limits of forest life. There were stations at short intervals--Poncha
+Springs, Mears, Silver Creek--from each other. From the stations there
+is a good deal of cross-country traffic, and at one place we saw three
+stages laden with men and women--or rather, to be polite and accurate,
+let me say with women and ladies--starting, one with six horses, and
+the other two with four each. These were bound for Gunnison, and as
+we were halting for a little, the Duke and some others got out of the
+train, and sauntered up towards the wooden shanties which formed "the
+town," consisting of the usual array of saloons and drinking places.
+However, our course was cut short by the information vouchsafed by one
+of the officials, that it might be as well not to go up, as there had
+been a big shooting match that morning, and that one man was killed
+and four had been wounded, "and some of them were on the drink yet."
+From 4.30 A.M. to 6.45 A.M. we struggled up towards the pass till
+the line came to an end near the summit, and we were rewarded by some
+very fine views, exceedingly like those of the Mont Cenis Railway or
+the Sömmering. The hills on both sides of the line were stippled and
+flaked with snow, but there was no extensive field, so far as the eye
+could see, nor was there any appearance whatever of a glacier, the tops
+generally being clear of snow, which only lodged in the ravines and
+hollows. Strange it was in these alpine heights to hear the clang of
+Italian tongues; but most of the navvies were from Italy, and if not
+quite so strong as English or Americans, they were in more favour with
+contractors, because they did more work, owing to their steadiness and
+sobriety. The line was being pushed on at an astonishing rate, and one
+man was pointed out to us who had laid four and a half miles of railway
+in one day, "the biggest thing of the kind ever done." Our enjoyment
+of the scenery was very much diminished by our animal appetites,
+stimulated by the sharp mountain air, which craved incessantly for
+food. But not even a cup of coffee was to be had until we got back to
+the South Arkansas station, late in the morning, where an excellent
+breakfast awaited us. Here we were detained some time by a derailment
+of an engine in front.
+
+From South Arkansas station to Leadville (61 miles) the railroad is
+still more aspiring. The higher we ascend the less striking are the
+scenic effects, but the grades are not very severe till we come to
+Malta, where it reaches 130; from Hilliers to Leadville the maximum is
+176, the curves being often 15°. The general character of the country
+may be conceived from these figures, but no words can convey any idea
+of the wholesale destruction of timber which has marked the progress
+of the explorers and prospectors. Where the axe was weary the blaze
+and the fire were called in, and hundreds of miles of forest are laid
+in blackened ruin. At last we are on a level with the hill-tops.
+There, on the hill-tops and in the valleys of a sterile region in
+front of you, amidst those tall chimneys vomiting out smoke and steam,
+is a wilderness of wooden huts, "the Great Carbonate Camp"--where we
+leave the train--spread out over an undulating plateau, broken into
+mound-like hills and sharp hillocks--bustling streets filled with the
+most remarkable swarm of all nations that ever settled on any one spot
+in the world. The story of Leadville reads like a chapter out of some
+book of Oriental fable. It is a huge barrack of wooden houses, with
+some solid and important buildings, with masses of tree-stumps cropping
+up in the centre of the main thoroughfares, pitched over an undulating,
+rugged, dusty ledge. In the midst of blocks of houses sprout up the
+chimneys of furnaces and mining works, the clang of machinery fills
+the air, which is thick with clouds of dust. It was a few years ago an
+utterly wild, lifeless waste amidst the mountains covered with forests,
+when three brothers, named Gallagher, exploring from California, were
+led by some genius, good or bad, to test the material of the rocks in
+the ravine. They struck gold ore, and silver too, and they set up a
+claim; and presently they sold their shares in the land which they had
+appropriated, for 40,000_l._, which they divided. Two used their wealth
+wisely, and made more of it, and, taking to themselves the members of
+the family, throve exceedingly; one, not so wise, if he were quite as
+good, did not prosper as well as his brothers. But the scene of their
+operations was soon swarming with enterprising miners. There was a
+mighty "boom." Now there is a city! Leadville is, I think, the most
+astonishing city on earth, but I am not by any means inclined to say
+that it is a place I should like to be astonished about for more than
+a few hours.
+
+The party drove to the Morning Star, said to be the best mine in
+Leadville; and the Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry Green, and others, went
+down the mine in miners' clothes or cloaks. Two others, whose names I
+shall not give, remained above, and had, I fancy, the best of the time.
+Afterwards we visited Grant's Smelting Works, and then back to the
+Clarence Hotel and dined, strolling out afterwards through the town and
+visiting the billiard saloons, the Grand Central Theatre, and finally,
+where we were told Leadville life was to be seen in all its glory, the
+faro and the kino tables, which, however, were doing but very little
+business, as it was not until after midnight that play in the town
+generally commenced. Instead of sleeping at the hotel, we resolved
+to take refuge in the train, which was drawn up at the siding; and we
+had to drive in order to reach it, as it was considered unsafe to walk
+through the streets in the dark.
+
+We started at four o'clock next morning, June 18th, and on arriving
+at Arkansas Station learned that an engine was off the line in front
+of us. Breakdown gangs were sent for, and all the locomotive talent
+amongst our passengers repaired quickly to the scene. As it was not
+easy to lift the engine, the engineers adopted the expedient of laying
+a temporary rail to turn its flank so as to enable us to pass round
+it, which we did after a delay of about an hour. The Duke got out and
+sat on the cow-catcher by way of a change. But the interest we took in
+the scenery was somewhat diminished by the intelligence that the delay
+caused by the engine would prevent our enjoying the "soda bath" we had
+been promised at Cañon City, and the sight of the State Prison, where
+murderers were to be paraded by the dozen. About twenty miles north
+of the Grand Cañon, the gorges through which the river runs became
+wider and deeper. All that has been written about the Grand Cañon
+utterly fails to convey an adequate idea of its exceeding grandeur
+and wildness. The rocks--closing in so that the spectator in the car,
+looking forward, thinks the progress of the train must be arrested,
+and that it is not possible for it to get out of the _cul de sac_ which
+appears in front, rising aloft for upwards of two thousand five hundred
+feet on each side--are coloured with the brightest hues, and present an
+infinite variety of form. The impetuous current of the Arkansas River,
+contracted at times to the breadth of some twenty or thirty yards,
+and penned into a space in which the waters boil and toss as if about
+to leap on and submerge the passing cars, roars wildly down below on
+our right at a depth varying as the line rises and falls. But it is
+at the Bridge--a triumph of engineering skill--that the horrors of
+the pass culminate. The sides of the ravine approach so near that the
+daring engineer was enabled to execute the idea of lowering from above
+a [**triangle]-shaped frame or trestle of iron; and, the ends catching
+on each side of the gorge, permitted him to work on it for the
+construction of the iron platform over which the train is carried at a
+height of some hundreds of feet right over the maddened river. You can
+look down through the interstices of the girders and glance shudderingly
+at the hell of waters below--a sight and sensation never to be
+forgotten. The ravine gradually expands and the cliffs recede as the
+line strikes eastwards; and though the scenery retains a wild and
+savage character for many miles farther, the impressions of the Grand
+Cañon caused us to regard it with comparative indifference. We heard
+many tales of the great railway war which was waged for the possession
+of the pass, of which traces still remained in the ruins of posts of
+vantage and observation, and the works of the defeated railroad
+visible on the other side of the ravine. At night we reached Pueblo
+and took up our quarters in our own cars, and continued our journey,
+after some delay, towards Kansas City.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of Travel--A
+ Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to New York.
+
+
+_June 19th._--Still on the rolling prairies; in the country of
+compulsory abstinence--the paradise of Sir Wilfred Lawson. At 9.30
+A.M. the train stopped at Newton, 431 miles from Pueblo, and 281 from
+Kansas.
+
+Here a phenomenon--there was a man by the road side who walked with
+unsteady step, whose legs tottered, and who lurched violently as he
+came down the road at that early hour. "He is a sick man," observed
+one of my friends in the train; "that gentleman has been taking
+_medicine_." In the Kansas Act there is a clause enabling physicians,
+in case of need, to order stimulants for the patients without penalty;
+but I am told the doctors have generally refused to act upon that
+permission, so I suppose our friend had been consulting an unlicensed
+practitioner.
+
+It would be ill done, when I am anxious to acknowledge the pleasure
+and profit which I derived from my passage through the State, if I
+did not record the satisfaction with which I perused a volume of the
+"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science," which by accident I
+picked up at one of the stations. The very name speaks trumpet-tongued
+for the progress which has been made in this wild region. The year
+before last, the twelfth annual meeting of the Academy was held in
+Topeka, and I find amongst the list of papers read such subjects
+as these:--The Kansas Lepidoptera; Kansas Minerals; the Mounds of
+Southern Kansas; Recent additions to Kansas Plants; Kansas Botany;
+Kansas Meteorites; Phonetic representations of Indian Language;
+Sinkholes; Elementary Sounds of Language; Mound-builders; On Recent
+Indian Discoveries. And among the lecturers there was Professor B.
+F. Mudge, who died last year, whose name probably is known to a very
+limited number of scientific men outside the University of Kansas.
+Generally the papers contributed by the gentlemen of the State attest
+industry and attainments which make their praise of the Professor
+particularly valuable. It is curious enough to pick up in a railway
+carriage, traversing such a scene of comparative wildness and vast
+uninhabited plains in Western Kansas, an exceedingly interesting
+examination of the Helmholtz theories of sight. The object of the
+lecturer would scarcely be suspected by the reader. We had already
+been struck by the extraordinary absence of signalmen, or of any
+of the complex apparatus of men and machinery which may be seen in
+Europe, and notably in England, to report the progress of trains
+on the lines. Collisions, however, occur in America where these
+precautions are not taken, and the lecturer attributed a good deal of
+these accidents to colour-blindness, which appears to have attracted
+considerable attention in the United States. Surgeons, pilots, &c.,
+are tested for colour, and in the army colour-blindness disqualifies
+the recruit for employment in the signal corps. Altogether the papers
+give an impression that in this new State there are diligent students
+of natural history and physics, and profound inquirers into all the
+phenomena of life. There was a reverse to the medal.
+
+At a station where the train halted beyond Pueblo, a card was handed
+to me by one of the stewards. "The gentleman is, as he seemed very
+pressing, outside; but I told him you were engaged." I started
+as I read the name and address on the card, as well I might. They
+indicated that an old friend whom I had left in a condition of great
+bodily weakness and infirmity in London, was close at hand in this
+remote region--a wonderful if welcome fly in amber. I ran out of the
+drawing-room into the next car, and there saw a man, agitated and
+travel-worn, whom I had never, to the best of my belief, seen in my
+life before. His story was told, if not soon, at least in time to
+let me partly understand the situation ere the train moved off. The
+stranger had been in the service of the gentleman whose card he sent in
+to me, but had left it to better himself in America, and had gone out
+as valet to an American of good position at Colorado Springs. He found,
+however, according to his own account, that he was expected to do
+things not required of a valet in his own country, such as lumbering,
+wood-cutting, and the like, and so he had thrown up his situation
+and was going back to England. He had had quite enough of Colorado
+Springs. "I was not there above a month, and I was shot at twice," he
+said. "Once because I made some remark in a bar-room, where a chap was
+abusing Englishmen; and another time while I was speaking in the street
+to a man a fellow had a grudge against. He fired at him across the
+road, and the ball whistled within a hair's-breadth of my head." He had
+arrived at Pueblo some time before our special, and as the morning was
+warm, he walked into a bar near the platform, while the engine of his
+train was watering, to get a glass of lemonade. As he was drinking it,
+a man walked in and called for a glass of whisky, putting down, at the
+same time, what seemed to be a bank note, on the counter. The boniface
+said, "I haven't got change for this twenty-dollar bill--perhaps this
+gentleman can oblige you." The unsuspecting Briton, who had put the
+money for his passage to Liverpool in a purse, drew it out to change
+the note, and the strange customer at once seized it from his hand,
+and rushed off towards the street with his booty. The Britisher ran
+after him, but checked his wild career when he saw, within an inch of
+his head, the muzzle of a revolver which the robber had drawn, and the
+fellow vanished. "Won't you help me to stop the thief; you see what has
+happened?" exclaimed the victim turning to the barman. "I guess there
+was no money in that purse, sir. And if there was, perhaps you had no
+more right to it than he had." Then the Briton dashed off after Don
+Guzman, shouting "police," and was at once accosted by an officer of
+the Pueblo force. He hurriedly stated the facts. The policeman smiled.
+"I think you won't see that pile agin," he remarked; "and if you
+don't look sharp ye'll miss yer train, that's a fact!" The man had his
+railway ticket all right, a few dollars in his pocket, and I told him
+I would see him and get him a passage, if I found on inquiry his story
+was true. My companions thought the tale suspicious--but I believe it
+was true, and I subsequently franked the man to England.
+
+Now here we had an exemplification of the manners and customs of
+the district. Such an act of violence and robbery might occur in
+London--anywhere. But what of the apathy, or perhaps complicity, of the
+bar man? And if it or they be considered not altogether abnormal, is
+the conduct of the policeman to be accepted as quite consistent with
+the discharge of a policeman's duty? Well, whilst I was pondering on
+these things, there came to me the best possible adviser--a judge in
+this Israel--our excellent Palinurus, Mr. White. He threw a new, if not
+a side light on the subject. "Depend on it he is a confidence man. The
+trains are full of them! Our conductors have express orders about the
+rascals." And he explained that a confidence man is a swindler--very
+often an Englishman, who makes it his business to look out for unwary
+strangers, on whom he imposes with some tale of distress, or some
+recital of imaginary misfortune and adventure. As the man I had seen
+was coming on in the train in our wake, Mr. White promised to talk with
+the conductor, and find out, if he could, the truth about the Pueblo
+robbery. Before dusk a telegram was forwarded by him to me from the
+station where he left us, to say that the conductor had no doubt the
+man was robbed, but that it was partly his own fault, and to warn me to
+be cautious in my dealings with him.
+
+We have now been travelling straight on end for 1160 miles, with only
+two engineers and two firemen and one engine, a feat of endurance
+which has greatly exercised the Duke of Sutherland, who, as a practical
+director of the London and North-Western Railway, has knowledge of such
+matters, and who contrasts the performance with the experience he has
+on the home lines, where engines, engineers, and firemen would have
+been relieved or laid up over and over again. The head engineer of the
+line, who joined us, Mr. Hackney, formerly of Congleton, had become
+accustomed to these journeyings and endurances, which were brought to
+the front in our conversation by the engine-driver appearing at the
+door of the carriage to claim a dollar which he had won from the Duke
+in a bet that he could not do the distance without laying up the engine
+for repairs.
+
+All the long Sabbath-day we travelled on through the prairie, catching
+glimpses now and then of wooden villages, around which trees were
+beginning to sprout up, and of the little churches with knots of carts,
+waggons, horses, and buggies outside, and people waiting for the end
+of the sermon. Now and then, perhaps at intervals of fifteen miles or
+so, are places of larger importance, such as Emporia, a rising city on
+the plains, where many steeples pointed aloft indicated considerable
+diversity of creed. An authority, not always to be relied upon, stated
+that there are fourteen churches belonging to the town.
+
+There was a parting symposium in the second Pullman ere we reached
+Topeka. Mr. White, Major Anderson, General Brown, Mr. Jerome, and
+my much wandering compatriot, a veritable Irish Ulysses, raised the
+tuneful melodies of the "Golden Slipper," the "Little Brown Jug," and
+the other tender psalmodies which had whiled away so many hours, for
+the last time in our society, and the little gages which were but the
+outward and visible signs of the regard we felt for our friends were
+exchanged with honest effusion. There may be--nay, there are--many
+jealousies and causes of estrangement between the people of the Old
+Country and of the New, but between the individuals of both there is a
+_camaraderie_ which cannot, I believe, be found between Englishmen and
+the natives of any country except America.
+
+"Good bye! God bless you! Be sure if ever you come to England you shall
+have a hearty welcome from me." "And from me!" "And me!" "And me!" The
+engine bell tolled, and we moved slowly on.
+
+And we were left all alone! The pleasant companions of so many weeks
+had gone! I wonder if they missed us as much as we missed them?
+
+While travelling across the Rockies and the desert to San Francisco
+and back, our course of life was pretty uniform, and one day followed
+another with almost perfect resemblance in the mode of existence and
+in all things except the scenery and the country through which we
+were passing. First, in the early morning came one of the attendants
+to our bedside with a cup of coffee, and then the curtains of the
+little cubicle were thrown aside and you looked out on either plain,
+or mountain, or river, or col; and on the faces of early risers at
+doors or windows as the train passed through some rising town. At one
+end of the saloon there was a bath-room, and from the tank there was
+always to be obtained sufficient water for the purpose of an early
+dip, which was enjoyed as occasion offered in turn by the party. Then
+a cigarette. Then we dropped in as people do at a country house, into
+the sitting-room, and exchanged ideas as to the progress made during
+the night, and the stoppages, wondered where we were, and had a little
+conversation with the conductor or Arthur as to the place where we
+could stop or get the papers--and so got over the morning till 9
+o'clock, when breakfast was announced, consisting of fish, poultry,
+meat, fruit (I had nearly said flowers, for there was always a bouquet
+on the table), tea, coffee, and cold dishes, with abundance of milk
+and butter. Where the fish came from and how they were kept fresh was
+matter of wonder, for the instances were very rare in which there was
+any indication that it had not quite recently come out of the sea or
+the river. The supply of ice was liberal and unfailing, and whenever
+we stopped at any considerable station the whole disposable strength
+of the attendants in the train was employed in grappling with large
+blocks of it and stowing it away in the ice reservoir, in which were
+the larder and the cellar for such wines as needed cooling, and for
+the vegetables and meat, of which there were great stores constantly
+laid in. Then after breakfast there was reading or sight-seeing,
+investigating the line, examining the maps, receiving visits and
+returning them in other parts of the train, till in the very hot days
+it was necessary, after expelling the flies, which were troublesome on
+occasion, to draw the dust-blinds and the curtains of the carriages,
+to mitigate the fierceness of the sun. It was objected occasionally
+that by this process we deprived ourselves of the opportunity of
+what was called "seeing the country," but after all a glance now
+and then is quite sufficient to reveal the general character of the
+districts through which the train is running; and the most diligent and
+painstaking observer cannot keep his eyes fixed steadily for a day on
+the external aspects of the region through which he is travelling. I
+should be sorry to declare that every one was wide awake all the time
+of the forenoon and up to the period of lunch, which too often exceeded
+on the side of many dishes, being, in fact, a mid-day dinner; but then
+no one was obliged to eat more than he liked, or drink either. Then
+came the longest stretch of the day, and at its close another banquet;
+and as the sun declined and the temperature decreased, we could take
+more pleasure in looking out at the fantastic forms of the vegetation
+which clothed the arid rocks in the desert, or on the bright green
+prairie, or on the towering mountains, waiting till the sun had set,
+generally in a blaze of glory. There were, of course, interruptions and
+variations as we halted at the more important places; disappointments
+about letters which had been telegraphed for and which were expected
+day after day, constituted also a matter of conversation and discourse.
+There was an harmonium in the sitting-room of the palace car, but
+no one had the art of playing it, although we had plenty of music of
+another sort; for after dinner the gentlemen of the railroad party who
+had not dined with us came in, and we were never tired of listening to
+the songs, so original and amusing, which they gave with great spirit
+and admirable time and tune, for it happened they all possessed good
+voices, and the melodies with which the troops of coloured minstrels
+have now rendered the world familiar were then new to us.
+
+During the whole of our tour the weather has been most favourable.
+With the exception of the rainy days in Canada, and the cold and
+rawness which characterised the time of our short visit to Richmond,
+there was nothing worse to complain of than continual sunshine. Now
+and then the temperature was a little too good to be pleasant when we
+were traversing the beds of the dry seas in the desert in Colorado and
+California, but that was something to look back upon with satisfaction,
+because there was no time lost in keeping within doors owing to the
+rain and storm or cold. "Within doors," however, is a phrase scarcely
+applicable to our mode of life, as it would imply that we were in
+stable habitations, whereas, as will have been seen by those who
+have accompanied us so far, we "lived and moved, and had our being"
+in railway carriages; a mode of life rendered so comfortable by all
+appliances, that it was sometimes no relief to be told that we would
+have to pass the night at an hotel.
+
+For nine days and nine nights in succession, on one occasion, we never
+slept out of the carriages or got out of the train except to take a
+stroll about the station, or a peep into the street of a small town
+whilst we were waiting, and one got quite accustomed to that nomad and
+yet civilised mode of existence, where at every halting-place we were
+supplied with the latest intelligence by the local papers, and made
+the recipients of some attention or courtesy, visits and compliments
+(the remarks of the other sort not being many), bouquets of flowers,
+presents of fruit, and plenty of conversation. But that my critics
+might say I dilate too much upon the material enjoyment of life, I
+would describe at length the means which were supplied in the course
+of these long journeys for animal enjoyment. Never could there be found
+more attentive and obliging domestics than the coloured men who waited
+upon us--Arthur and his fellows. There lived in the kitchen compartment
+of the train, at the end of one of the saloons, a coloured cook,
+very intelligent and gossipy, full of quaint conceits and dishes and
+conversation, who commenced life as a slave on a Southern plantation,
+probably adopted for indoor purposes on account of his smartness. He
+liberated himself in the course of the war, and marched off with a
+regiment of Federals in the capacity of cook and body-servant to one
+of the officers, wherein he saw a great amount of very hard fighting
+at very close quarters. This adventurous modern Othello was wont to
+discourse with much animation when he came out for a breath of fresh
+air on the platform and could find anybody to talk to him, although
+he could move no more tender heart than that of Sir Henry Green. The
+gentlemen of the Atchison, &c., Railway, when travelling with us, had
+a _cordon bleu_ in the saloon--an Italian or Frenchman, I think, or
+at all events a French-speaking man, who had served also, and would
+have done credit to an establishment where faults in a _chef_ would
+not lightly be condoned. In the interchange of courtesies, Mr. White
+and his friends invited our party now and then to dine in the saloon,
+which was not "across the way," but up a little, on the line, being the
+saloon in front of us.
+
+But here we are at Kansas City once again! At 5.30 P.M. the train
+arrived at the platform, which was gay with a Sunday crowd, of
+whom many were negresses--black, brown, brindled, and yellow
+_citoyennes_--in much variety of colour and garmenting. Unlike Samson,
+their weakness is in their hair, and like Achilles, they are vulnerable
+about the heels (to the arrows of an æsthetical criticism, which
+accepts the Greek idea of beauty in form); but they seemed to enjoy
+life amazingly, and not to be in need of beaux; perhaps the happiest
+people in the world now that their chattel days are over. It was late
+when we turned into our berths, for it was a lovely night and the
+fire-flies exercised a great attraction over us, but at last the charm
+was worn out and we slept till morning without a break.
+
+_June 20th._--Still the same boundless plain. In vain does one look for
+the grass fields with close, even, carpet-like surface to be seen in
+Europe. We are still passing through exceedingly rich land--the fields
+covered with flocks of sheep and herds of good-looking cattle. There
+are more trees by the stream-side, and shrubs growing in the hollows.
+Habitations are more frequent, and so are fencing and planting. As the
+sun was setting we approached St. Louis. There were some park-like
+glades, and vistas opening up to pleasant mansions, amid grounds
+showing marks of culture. There had been a severe thunderstorm the
+night before, and the St. Louis Station had still traces of its effects
+in pools of mud. But the rain had cooled the air, and the people were
+rejoicing exceedingly in the great improvement that had taken place
+in the weather, for, they told us, men and women had been dropping
+down with the heat a few days ago as though they had been struck by
+musketry.
+
+The appearance of the St. Louis Terminus gave one a high idea of the
+importance of this city. Eight trains were waiting on their respective
+lines to start with passengers to all parts of the Union; and by
+the simple device of placing at the end of each train a large board
+announcing its destination and the time of its departure, much anxiety
+was saved to intending passengers, not to speak of the irritation of
+officials avoided by this simple expedient. The journey was continued
+by the Indianopolis and Vandalia, and by what is called the "Pa'handle"
+line to the Pennsylvania Railroad on to Philadelphia. The train was
+timed on Tuesday so that we were able to see the famous passage over
+the Alleghany Mountains from Conemaugh to Altoona. For nearly eleven
+miles we were carried without steam, and with the brakes on, through
+very fine scenery, down the mountain-side, but the summit was crossed
+in the darkness of a tunnel 1200 yards long. There are some striking
+engineering feats in the way of curves and gradients, and the trace
+of the line is very bold all the way down to Altoona, where the
+Pennsylvania Railroad engine and machinery shops are established--the
+centre of a population of some 17,000 souls, where twenty years ago
+"there were," as a friend said, "only bears, deer, woodpeckers, and
+skallywags." The Duke, Mr. Stephen, and our railway experts got out
+and visited the workshops, and came back very much pleased at the
+discovery of several London and North-Western men in good positions
+in the Pennsylvania Railroad Company's service, who welcomed their
+old directors with effusion, and that there was nothing visible there
+for Crewe to copy, unless perhaps cast-iron wheels. The speed at
+which we travelled was a sensible proof that we were once more on the
+line of our old friends of Pennsylvania. From Altoona to Harrisburg,
+132 miles, we rattled along in two hours and forty-three minutes. On
+another stretch of the line we travelled eighty-three miles in one
+hour and forty-two seconds, including stoppages; and the rapid motion
+was very agreeable, as there was a perceptible increase of temperature
+after we reached the plains and approached the beautiful valley of the
+Susquehannah--a scene of industry, prosperity, and peace. Fortunately
+there was a good light on the river, and we had a fine view of the
+country all the way to Harrisburg under the rays of the setting sun.
+A little farther on we were gratified by the appearance of General
+Roberts at a station on the way, where he was awaiting the Duke to
+congratulate him on his safe return from the Western expedition, and we
+bade him farewell at his own house, with many sincere and well-deserved
+acknowledgments of great and constant kindness. Then over the river by
+the noble bridge, and on to Philadelphia. We did not visit Pittsburg,
+which was vomiting out masses of smoke, nor did we halt this time at
+the capital of the Quaker State.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport--Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our last day in America.
+
+
+The special train was detained by the immense amount of traffic on the
+line, as we approached New York, and we did not reach Brooklyn till a
+little before 11 P.M. on June 21, so that it was past midnight when we
+ascended the steps of the Windsor Hotel, which we had selected by way
+of a change, and found to be every way commendable, with the exception
+of its distance from the busy parts of the city. The following day
+was devoted to letter reading and writing, receiving visitors, and
+various attempts "to go out," which were not generally successful, for
+New York was palpitating with the intense heat. The "heated term" was
+in full vigour, but it was now quite temperate in comparison to the
+excesses which had marked its advent some time before our arrival. In
+the evening we got up strength and courage enough to go to Wallack's
+Theatre, a very pretty, well-constructed house, and saw "The World"
+excellently acted and admirably put on the stage. Next day, June
+23rd, in virtue of a solemn league and covenant with Uncle Sam and
+Mr. Hurlbut, the Duke and I devoted ourselves to fresh fields and
+pastures new, and ordered ourselves accordingly for Coney Island. A
+long bank of sand by the sea-shore has, by an accident, become one of
+the most crowded resorts in the world, and to-day there were races in
+the new ground. It was not, as we found, so easy to get there. Having
+the advantage of two experienced guides, our party of four managed to
+break up into two and to miss each other; one taking the boat at one
+iron pier, and the other embarking by a different mode of conveyance.
+But as we were bound to see Coney Island, the Race course being a
+secondary object, our temporary separation did not prove a source of
+great annoyance.
+
+The early settlers would indeed have been astonished if they could
+look round and see what they have brought the quiet place to in these
+later days. They were Quakers persecuted by the good Christians of New
+England, who were driven out of Boston as ruthlessly as though they
+had been malignants and papists of the worst sort. They settled the
+township of Gravesend about 250 years ago, and amongst the conspicuous
+settlers occurs the title and name of Lady Deborah Moody, of whom this
+deponent knows nothing, but wonders how, with such a title, she managed
+to have influence amongst a Society of Friends.
+
+A ship was built, so the Americans say, of 70 tons in 1699, by the
+descendants of the Quaker settlers, and less than 100 years later
+the bold republicans, abandoning the doctrines of peace, engaged
+and captured an English corvette off the island. It was all along of
+General How, who landed his troops here and set the people to work on
+the fortifications he threw up, whether they would or no. A corvette,
+bound to Halifax, anchored off the island, and an old whaler, who,
+says the chronicler, must have been smarting under the wrongs he had
+suffered at the hands of the red-coats, or who possibly regarded the
+work as he would the capture of a finner or a bottle-nose, imparted
+to a few trusty friends the idea of "cutting her out." So embarking at
+night in a couple of boats, they stole down with muffled oars and ran
+up under the stern of the ship. There was no watch, and through the
+cabin windows the officers could be seen playing cards. The crews of
+the boats boarded the corvette simultaneously, seized, overpowered, and
+bound the officers and men, lowered them into their boats, and, having
+set the man-of-war on fire, pulled over to the Jersey shore with their
+prisoners. It is to be hoped that the demeanour and language of the
+captain have been misrepresented by local tradition; but he is said
+to have cried bitterly, and to have exclaimed, "To be surprised and
+captured by two blooming egg-shells is too blasted bad!"
+
+There was a long period of neglect before Fashion and the populace
+found out the attractions of Coney Island. Fishermen, oyster-catchers,
+and sportsmen visited the sandy beach from time to time; then after
+a while a few houses were run up of a very inferior class, and these
+were frequented by the very worst of the scum of New York, so that it
+was almost dangerous, and certainly disgusting, to go among them, while
+the scenes on the beach, to which the present proceedings afford such
+a contrast, were described as being of the most disgraceful character.
+
+The official directions for spending a day at Coney Island certainly
+indicate a belief in the possession of enormous physical energy and
+indefatigable curiosity on the part of the visitors in those who
+compose the code. Having given you sailing instructions by the iron
+steam boat to Bay Ridge for the Sea Beach Railway (ticket 35 cents),
+you are to visit the Sea View Palace Hotel, the Piazza, the two iron
+piers, the _Camera obscura_ (10 cents), the Great Milking Cow, the
+top of the observatory (15 cents); then to eat a Rhode Island clam
+bake (50 cents), visit the aquarium (10 cents), take a park waggon and
+ride over the Concourse to Brighton; see the hotel grounds and bathing
+pavilion there; then take the Marine Railway (5 cents) to Manhattan
+Beach; visit the Oriental Hotel and take the Marine Railway to Point
+Breeze (10 cents) and return back to Brighton Beach Pavilion and take
+a bath; then see the Museum of Living Wonders (10 cents), dine at the
+Hotel Brighton, hear a concert in the evening, and return to New York
+by 11 o'clock. "This trip," observes the compiler, "may fatigue one,
+but the excitement soon overcomes the trouble." Coney Island is indeed
+an institution.
+
+Along the sea front of the bank for some three or four miles there
+has been constructed an esplanade lined with seats, and defended from
+the sea by a stone wall. Outside there is a belt of shingle on which
+the surf breaks, but not violently, unless in bad weather. Large
+bathing establishments, with every appliance, are placed at convenient
+intervals along the shore. Here in the season tens of thousands of
+people may be seen, all properly and decently attired, disporting in
+the waves. At the time of our visit, the hour and the season of the
+year seemed not to be favourable to the indulgence. We were too late
+in the day. It is an early place, and from 7 till 9 A.M. from the
+month of June to the end of September are described as the orthodox
+periods. Nevertheless the spectacle was quite unique, and if you can
+imagine Brighton with half-a-dozen Pavilions blown out to twice their
+size, and the largest hotels multiplied by ten in length, breadth, and
+depth, you may fancy what the Coney Island front is, provided always
+that you can also conjure up (literally) myriads of well-dressed men,
+women, and children perambulating the esplanade or sitting in the
+grounds around the various establishments which occupy a large space
+inland--pavilions, hotels, exhibitions, restaurants, and club-houses.
+There were fireworks going on in broad day; but these were principally
+for the purpose of exhibiting very ingenious Japanese figures, which
+were discharged from bombs, and which gradually descending were objects
+of eager competition amongst the younger members of the enormous
+multitude. And with all so much good-humour, so much propriety of
+demeanour; none of the brutal rushes of "roughs" which disgust one
+with English popular assemblages--none of the brutal horse-play, and
+screams, and unmeaning cries of the 'Arrys and the Bills of our popular
+resorts.
+
+Looking at Mr. Marshall's excellent book on the United States, which
+we found to be copious and accurate, I was struck by what he says
+respecting a habit of the people which, according to my experience,
+has very much decreased since I was last in the States, but which
+he finds in as full force, and repulsive as ever. I am bound to say
+I think the habit of spitting has very much diminished, but from
+numerous evidences, from the presence of spittoons in every room and
+in the passages of the hotels, and from public admonitions, such as
+one we saw at some of the theatres, that the audience would not spit
+upon the stage, I must believe that it still exists. What the cause
+of this habit may be it is not easy to determine. It cannot be in the
+race, because it is scarcely an "English" habit. I would be inclined
+to attribute it to the drinking of iced water, but ladies in America
+use the national beverage quite as freely as the men, and spitting is a
+masculine failing. Can it be a result of climate? Scarcely. For in the
+States, British-born people do not seem to be affected by the influence
+of the habit in those around them after many years' residence. Smokers
+and non-smokers alike indulge in the practice, so that tobacco cannot
+be charged with the disagreeable custom. I assume that it is as common
+as Mr. Marshall asserts it is, but I am bound to say, according to
+my own observation and experience on my last visit, that there was no
+evidence to show that it was common or national. Chewing tobacco also
+appears to me to have fewer votaries than formerly. A remark to that
+effect at Richmond brought upon me something like a rebuke from the
+gentleman to whom I spoke, a Judge of the land. "No, sir," he said,
+"not at all! I rather think we chew more than ever!" And, to illustrate
+his faith, he produced a silver box, shaped a plug of no doubt very
+excellent weed, and thrust it into his mouth. I do not recollect,
+however, meeting a gentleman in the course of our journey who used
+tobacco in that way, with that exception.
+
+In the grounds in front of the pavilion, where an excellent orchestra
+of some one hundred performers were playing, sat a very large and
+appreciative audience, who applauded with discrimination, and were
+content with the good performance of each piece.
+
+Our common rendezvous was the Surf Club, one of the numerous convivial
+associations for which Coney Island seems to be specially adapted;
+and I presume the name had nothing at all to do with any supposed
+amusements of the members in connection with the surf on the beach
+outside. There was some difficulty in finding our way through a
+labyrinth of rooms all filled with guests: with corridors swarming
+with people; with vast halls, where at hundreds of tables there were
+seated people engaged in the consumption of the _menu_ of a Coney
+Island restaurant, abounding in strange dishes and attended by armies
+of waiters. At a rough guess, I should say there may have been about
+4000 people in the building--and this was but one of several--I think
+the Brighton Beach Hotel, but of this I am not quite sure.
+
+When the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad was opened none
+believed in its success, but the foresight of the projector was
+justified; and when it was found that respectable people would go
+there, if the vagabonds of both sexes and their associates were driven
+away, the police asserted themselves, and swept off the gamblers and
+the others of a still more dangerous class, who were to be found there
+in increasing numbers every year; and then hotels were erected and
+landing-places made for the steamers; and now the electric light blazes
+in a hundred halls, and music and rejoicing sound late into the night,
+contending with the noise of the surf upon the beach. Bowling-alleys,
+shooting-grounds, archery, croquet, sailing and rowing, all invite some
+of the visitors, according to their tastes. An amusing exemplification
+of the ingenuity of American advertisers is afforded by the sailing
+vessels, which display in enormous characters on their main-sails
+the names of quack medicines, from which no corner of this continent
+appears to be safe.
+
+On June 24th the party, which had been somewhat dislocated, reunited
+their scattered forces, and at 2 P.M. started by train after a little
+repose, for Newport, R.I. It was a kind of holiday after our travels,
+but somewhat out of place, for we were told the Ocean House was
+scarcely ready; but we should not have found it out, had we not been
+informed of the fact. The newspapers had been on the alert, and soon
+after the Duke's arrival visitors began to call and invitations to pour
+in--some well-nigh irresistible, for they included opportunities for
+experiences of bass-fishing.
+
+_June 25th._--Newport has not yet put on its festive attire. It is
+not the season, and we ought not to be here. Nevertheless it is still
+so pleasant, and so respectably dull, that one enjoys it amazingly.
+After breakfast we walked down to the seashore and sat gazing on
+vacancy, and on three yellow ladies collecting clams. Returning thence
+in a very hot sun, ran to earth in the hotel where, presently, there
+were many visitors; and how kind and anxious to please they were! Mr.
+Fearing drove up later on the top of a drag, and whirled us away to
+a charming fishing-box on the shore, in order to judge for ourselves
+what bass-fishing was like. It was a very pretty drive, and Mr. Fearing
+handled his "four" as if he were bent on joining the Coaching Club--not
+indiscreetly, as the horses were not accustomed to going together, but
+with satisfactory decision--and we all were landed without mishap by
+the side of the road, close to one of the best-organised sporting-boxes
+I have ever seen, built entirely for the comfort and delectation of
+Mr. Fearing and two or three friends who own the bass-fishing stands,
+at the end of one of which a gentleman was then busily engaged in his
+pastime, for the sea comes rolling up upon the rocks within some forty
+or fifty yards of the sward of the green meadows on which the house
+is placed. From it projects into the breakers a platform supported
+on iron pillars, at the end of which there is an enlargement of the
+structure to enable the fisherman and his attendants to stand at their
+ease--the one in hurling the bait and the other in preparing it. And
+first, as a proof that the labour is not futile, there was exhibited a
+terrible-headed monster with great scales, which had been caught that
+morning by Mr. Whipple--a bass of 57 lbs. weight, of which I think the
+skull and jaws and gills must have weighed a third. The fishing is not,
+as I found, to be done at once, but needs a little practice. The art of
+casting consists in the double operation of jerking the bait from the
+top of a stiff rod, and checking the run of the line without permitting
+it to overrun, which it is very apt to do in an inexperienced hand, by
+a pressure of the thumb on the reel, just sufficient to let the weight
+of the bait carry out the hook to the farthest stretch of the jerk.
+The rod, not more than eight or nine feet long, a work of great art,
+and costly, is furnished with a reel, also very expensive, containing a
+couple of hundred yards of prepared line. At the end is a large single
+hook, sometimes secured to a piece of piano-wire, as the "blue fish"
+will cut through the strongest cord or gut. To this is fixed a junk of
+fat oily fish, of which supplies are kept in a basket close at hand,
+to be cut up for ever and ever by the attendant, and ever and anon
+pieces are chucked into the sea, and being of a very unctuous nature,
+the oil rising to the top, floats away on the surface of the water, and
+attracts the bass within measurable distance of the platform. Captain
+Fearing threw, Mr. Whipple threw, and the gentlemen at the end of
+another pier emulated them, and pounds, perhaps stones, of bait were
+thrown into the sea, but the bass, which are capricious, like most
+fish, were not to be caught; and so after a time we returned to the
+cottage.
+
+I was, unfortunately, unable to accept an invitation from one of the
+many hospitable gentlemen in Newport, to go out and spend the evening
+on a desolate island, where they are said generally to have exceedingly
+good sport, in order to get up before sunrise the following morning
+and essay my skill, or want of it, in bass-fishing. Mr. Wright, an
+enthusiastic sportsman, availed himself of a like invitation with
+great pleasure and with many anticipations of delight, but on Monday
+morning he returned weather-beaten back, and boot-less and bass-less
+home, although he assured me he enjoyed himself very much, and had very
+agreeable company out at sea on the rock.
+
+The following day (June 26th) was cloudy and cool, and all that was
+of rank and fashion in Newport went to All Souls Church. There are
+many churches in Newport, and in the height of the season, each is,
+I am told, well filled on Sundays. And wonderful it is that there is
+neither dissension nor controversy among the congregations. They mingle
+together coming and going, affording to me, who have been accustomed at
+times to observe the manners and customs of my country men and women
+on like occasions in Ireland and elsewhere, ground for wonder, not
+unintermingled with an ardent desire that we, nearer home, could learn
+the secret of this moderation.
+
+Mr. Bridgman, our fellow-passenger in the "_Gallia_," is enjoying his
+_villeggiatura_ with his wife and family in a pretty little cottage.
+We were very much pleased indeed to renew our acquaintance with him,
+although there was no scope for the display of his fine talents as a
+salad-maker. It was not foggy enough for the ladies, who delight in a
+thick and moist _brume_ from the Banks, and who sit at the open windows
+when it comes on for the sake of their complexions, as it is esteemed
+a sovereign cosmetic beyond Maydew or Kalydor. Whether it be rightly
+credited with these virtues or not, I can answer for the presence of
+many fair ladies in church, and on their way to and fro in the streets.
+We dined with Mr. and Mrs. Keene, who reside in one of the best villas
+of the many charming dwellings in Newport.
+
+The victories of the American horses in France and England created
+an enthusiasm in the States almost as intense as though they had been
+won by the national fleets or armies. From one end of the Union to the
+other the news was flashed the same day, and we saw the names of the
+conquerors in large letters in every newspaper. Unfortunately there
+came at the same time reports of foul play to American competitors at
+the hands of some English roughs, and there was a good deal of heat
+caused by the objections taken to the entry of the "Cornell Crew" at
+Henley. These international contests should be very carefully conducted
+and judiciously worked, or they will do more harm than good, if indeed
+they do any good at all. The injurious insinuations respecting the age
+of Foxhall could but excite indignation in the minds of honourable men
+against whom they were directed.
+
+There is a State House in the town, and there is also a mansion
+occupied by Commodore Perry, but the most useful inhabitant of the
+place appears to have been one Abraham Touro, a Jew, who gave his name
+to the park, a cemetery, a synagogue, and a street. Altogether there
+is rather an old-world air and look in the town; but one must go along
+the Avenues to have an idea of the charms which lead so many of the
+principal families of the Eastern States to make the place a resort
+when they are not enjoying the delights of travel in Europe, or that
+blissful existence which endears Paris to our Transatlantic relatives.
+Bellevue Avenue is bordered by a number of very sprightly dwellings,
+of every order and disorder of architecture, and rejoicing in all the
+extraordinary richness and elaboration of American workmanship in wood,
+each standing in a little park of its own, generally rich with trees,
+shrubs, and an ornamental garden. Several of these interiors, as we
+had reason to know, were furnished in the very best taste, and filled
+with objects of art, excellent examples of good masters, principally
+foreign, and articles imported from all the corners of the globe. Of
+an afternoon the ladies might be seen driving, in very well turned-out
+carriages, to some rendezvous where lawn-tennis or a picnic awaited
+them; and altogether, even at this time of year, Newport presented a
+picture of great refinement and comfort, which enable the visitor to
+understand how attractive it must be in the height of the season, and
+why it is Americans are so fond of life in Rhode Island.
+
+I am not in a position to throw the smallest doubt upon the statement
+that the mass of stones in the form of a tower, ivy and moss covered,
+and evidently the work of human hands, was not built by the hardy
+Norsemen hundreds of years before the arrival of Columbus. There are,
+moreover, people who declare that the erection is due to a British
+governor of the colony, when it was more prosperous as a commercial
+resort, though not so fashionable as it is at present. But American
+antiquaries take a great pleasure in propping up the proofs which have
+been adduced of Scandinavian enterprise and discovery on the continent,
+many centuries before Vespuccius, Columbus, and the English navigators
+lived.
+
+We dined on the evening of the 27th at the house of Mr. Shattock,
+a gentleman of New York, who had assembled a party of very pleasant
+people to meet the Duke, and kindly hastened his dinner-hour to suit
+our convenience, as we were obliged to go on board the Fall River boat,
+which called at 9.30 P.M. to take up passengers for the Empire City.
+There was some difficulty about getting cabins or state rooms as they
+are called, but "Uncle Sam," who came from New York to consort with us
+quietly, applied himself diligently to telegraph wires, telephones,
+and the like, and when the great steamer came alongside the wharf
+our dormitories were ready. The night was calm and fine. There was an
+excellent band, quite worthy of being called an orchestra, on board,
+which played to the delight of a large audience till it was bed-time.
+As a "sight" for a foreigner, nothing could be more striking than
+the vast saloon, brilliantly illuminated, with hundreds of people on
+sofas, chairs, and benches, reading or conversing in the intervals
+of the music, and presenting infinite varieties of type and class,
+yet all so orderly and well-behaved; and if you moved quietly through
+the crowd, your ear caught many strange languages interpolating the
+American speech--German, French, Polish, Russian, Italian, and, perhaps
+the natives would say, British. There is some care observed in the
+locking up of cabins, and I believe there are detectives and police on
+board the boats; but it is said they do not look after the morals of
+the passengers, and concern themselves only with vested interests in
+portable property. There was no sea on, and the only motion was caused
+by the beating of the paddles and the throbbing of the engine, and
+early in the morning of the next day we were at our quarters in our
+comfortable hotel in the Fifth Avenue.
+
+_June 29th._--And yet more excursions. Bound by a long-standing
+engagement, a small detachment of our party set out this evening to
+visit Mr. Barlow at his country place, Long Island, which travellers,
+perhaps, have not much occasion to see. The Mayor of New York (Mr.
+Grace) and Mr. O'Gorman were on the steamer which took the Duke, Mr. S.
+Ward, Mr. Hurlbut, and our host down the Sound, and were introduced to
+us by Mr. Barlow. The first-named gentleman I mentioned in one of the
+early pages of this diary in connection with the vigorous efforts to
+purify the civic atmosphere made by him on his accession to office. I
+learn that he has since obtained a large measure of success, and let me
+hope corresponding thanks from his fellow-citizens. Attacks on corrupt
+influences are apt to receive lukewarm support from the politicians.
+The power of the respectable classes, which hold aloof from politics,
+is not large. Mr. Grace had more opposition than help from his own
+countrymen, who have been long nearly omnipotent in New York, and who
+monopolise a large proportion of the civic offices and employment.
+Mr. O'Gorman, one of the traversers with O'Connell in the famous State
+trials, is one of the leading lawyers of New York, and is held in much
+respect by his fellow-citizens. The "old Country" is still dear to him,
+but I seemed to gather from his remarks that he shared in the distrust
+which American lawyers generally expressed respecting the principle of
+the Land Bill then under discussion as far as interference with the law
+of contract--"the very foundation of social life"--was involved. Glen
+Cove is a beautiful place, standing high above the level of the sea,
+and commanding charming views of the sound and of the opposite shore.
+It is surrounded by trees, ornamented by woodland and fine natural
+groves, broken up by ravines, through which trickle streams of water.
+The mansion is furnished with every comfort and luxury, and we had a
+garden to saunter about in the morning, and a genial hostess to talk
+to, and her fair daughter to sing for us, so that it would have pleased
+us well to have made a longer sojourn at Glen Cove. Here we passed two
+very peaceful days, part of Wednesday and Thursday, and in a pleasant
+drive with our host in the early morning had some slight outlook on
+umbrageous Long Island. "_O! si angulus iste!_" It is 115 miles long
+and 14 miles broad, and quite big enough for me! And there be deer
+in the woods and trout in the rivers, and fish in all the creeks,
+and game in the wooded lagoons, and forest, lake, and civilised life,
+and many things to please the eye; and then the comet was so good as
+to display his glories and his tail before Glen Cove. But our time
+of departure from the States was drawing near, and there were still
+things to be done in New York, and many engagements to be kept, ere we
+started on our homeward journey on July 2nd; and at 12.35 on the 30th
+June the Duke and I took the "cars" at a rural station, and reached
+New York at 2.35, in time for a run through Tiffany's and some little
+shopping and visiting. There was a dinner arranged by "Uncle Sam" at
+"Sutherland's" in honour of the famous city restaurant. The house is
+one of a type which has, I believe, disappeared in the "City," where
+once flourished famous establishments such as Williams' Beef Shop
+in the Old Bailey, Dolly's in Paternoster Row, the Billingsgate Fish
+Ordinary, Jacquet's, &c., like it in character. Great New Yorkers do
+not disdain to cross the threshold, within which they find admirable
+fare and excellent wines--the national delights of clam chowder, clam
+soup, soft-shell crabs, and many other Transatlantic delicacies--at
+the far end of Broadway, still holding its own against the fashionable
+restaurants. Of the party who dined there with Chancellor Robertson
+and others in 1861, only "Uncle Sam," Mr. S. Barlow, and I survive; but
+the host, a granitic sort of man, with a kindly Scottish heart warming
+the case inside, seems capable of presiding over his feasts for another
+generation.
+
+_July 1st._--It was difficult to realise the idea that this was our
+last day in America, but the truth was forced on us by the practical
+duties of getting the baggage ready and settling up generally, ending
+with a dinner at the Turf Club, where we met Mr. Keene, of Foxhall
+fame, who had also entertained us at Newport, Mr. Jerome, Mr. Stuart,
+Mr. Travers, and other fathers of the New York sporting world, which
+seems very like our own, and had to drink madeira of all but fabulous
+antiquity and excellence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home.
+
+
+_July 2nd._[B]--Up at 5.30. The Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry, Mr.
+Wright, Edward, all engaged in the transport department, with Mr.
+Trowbridge in observation; incessant activity. The Queen Anne coach
+was in readiness at 7.30, and in half an hour more we were discharged
+at the Inman wharf. There was a great flotilla--five large steamers
+leaving at the same period for Liverpool, and there was the usual
+throng at the landing-places of friends to bid "good-bye" to those who
+were about to cross the Atlantic. The steamer we had selected belonged
+to the Inman line, and whatever there may have been wanting to the eye
+on board, compared to the trimness and paint of the Cunard steamers,
+there was nothing to regret in our accommodation or service. There were
+so many passengers that the dining-saloon, illuminated by the electric
+light--which was also used for the purpose of lighting the engine-room
+and the lamps in the corridors--would not contain them all at the same
+time, and so there were two messes for dinner. Epergnes filled with the
+most beautiful flowers were ranged in order, and a rampant war-steed
+composed of white roses was displayed on the table. I am not about to
+give a log-book, or to trespass on the patience of my readers by an
+account of such an ordinary event as a passage home. The second day
+after we left New York was the anniversary of Independence, July 4th,
+and the day was duly celebrated by the citizens of the United States,
+who constituted the large majority of our fellow-passengers. The "stars
+and stripes" were hoisted at the main, and the cabin was draped with
+British and American flags. But there was no speechifying, and the
+spread-eagle was content with moderate flights; a recitation and a song
+or two, and the fire of champagne corks, being the only indications of
+an extraordinary festivity.
+
+About this time of the year the Atlantic, in the latitudes which
+we traverse, is rather vexed of fogs; and if one be disposed to low
+spirits, I know nothing which weighs upon him more than the sound of
+the fog-horn. But what must it be for the captain, who is perforce
+obliged to go at full speed, or as near to it as he can, with the
+expectation every moment of some startled cry from the bow "Sail right
+ahead!" Nor is it quite out of the running that an iceberg may be
+taking a sail across his course. Fortunately we had no experiences of
+the kind; and as night was falling on the 10th July land was in sight.
+
+The lights of the Fastnet were seen through drifting haze, and about 10
+o'clock at night the "_City of Berlin_" steamed through a rising sea,
+with a strong beam wind, into the roadstead of Roche's Point, burned
+her rockets, and laid-to for the steamer to take the mails, and those
+passengers who had decided to land, on shore.
+
+It was blowing freshly, and rain fell heavily; and as we looked down
+from the lighted decks on the murky water, and made out the tug as
+she paddled up to us, rising and falling on the waves, we were seized
+with reasonable misgivings as to the propriety of leaving our ship and
+taking to such a craft. I am bound to say that our experience more than
+amply justified them.
+
+I am writing these lines with a very faint hope that any amendment
+will be introduced, in consequence of what I say, into the abominable
+service between the American vessels off Roche's Point and Queenstown.
+In fine weather and in daylight it is not of much consequence, perhaps,
+what discomfort one may be exposed to in a short passage to the
+shore; but to affront women and children with the misery which must be
+experienced at night time and in bad weather, in the steamers employed
+in the service, is little short of barbarous, if it be not indeed
+altogether so.
+
+After I had got down upon the deck of the little steamer and surveyed
+the scene around me, I thought that it would have been much wiser to
+have gone on with my friends to Liverpool; but I had some engagements
+in Ireland, and so had the experience I was glad not to share with
+my fellow-passengers, on whom I should have liked the old country
+to have made a favourable impression. There was the great steamer,
+with hundreds of waving hands, and the sound of friendly voices
+bidding us "God speed," a blaze of lights, and almost as steady as
+the solid earth, as the horrible little tug puffed away, and, getting
+from under her lee at once, encountered the swell. If she could have
+ridden over the water below, she certainly could not escape that which
+came down from above; so that we were all pretty wet and cross and
+miserable in the half-hour which elapsed before we reached the shore.
+Fortunately, there were not many passengers who availed themselves
+of the opportunity; but the deck of the steamer was crowded by poor
+people returning to their native country. Accommodation for the
+cabin passengers, except seats on the wet and sloppy decks, there was
+none. There was a little cabin, stuffy and comfortless, and moreover
+occupied by a couple of women who had come out to see friends by way
+of a pleasure excursion, and who were suffering the last extremities
+of sea-sickness. The spray broke over the luggage and passengers;
+it was in such circumstances that the custom-house officers began
+their search. One of them, opening my bag, which was unlocked, found
+a small revolver. It was unloaded, and there was no ammunition for
+it; but, nevertheless, it was seized, for I was "importing arms into
+a proclaimed district without licence." A similar mishap occurred to
+a Spanish officer, who was not quite so easily appeased as I was by
+the assurance that the arm would be given up on proper application
+to the police. His revolver, he insisted, was part of his uniform, a
+necessity of his existence, and the authorities might as well seize
+his epaulettes or spurs. However, my deadly weapon was restored to me
+some days afterwards, after a correspondence with the custom-house,
+and I dare say the Hidalgo was equally fortunate. These were incidents
+to denote that we were in the midst of trouble. There was but a sorry
+welcome for us when we landed at Queenstown. Not a car to be found,
+that I could see; but there were a few porters, and the agent of the
+hotel at the pier; and, commending my luggage to his care, I walked to
+the establishment. It surely cannot be quite an unaccustomed event for
+a steamer to arrive at Queenstown at that time of night! The last train
+for Cork had gone; and it might have been expected that lighted rooms
+and some sort of preparation would have awaited the travellers; for
+every vessel that touches at Queenstown, coming from America, surely
+lands a few people needing rest and refreshment? A demoralised waiter,
+who appeared to think that such a thing had never happened in the
+whole course of his experience, as the inroad of ten or twelve people
+asking for supper and bedrooms, informed us that nothing could be done
+until the gentleman who represented the hotel at the landing-place had
+arrived; and so we sat on the stairs for half an hour, and were then
+shown into a gaunt room, dimly lighted by gas. There was nothing ready.
+The hungry people, by dint of patience and perseverance, eventually
+succeeded about midnight in obtaining some poor substitute for supper
+and scrambled to their beds.
+
+I mention the circumstances in which my fellow-passengers and I were
+landed at Queenstown, that those who are interested in promoting
+the welfare of the port, and in making the route through Ireland
+less thoroughly objectionable, may take steps to obviate the great
+inconvenience to which travellers at present are certainly exposed.
+
+Next morning I reached Mallow. I was but a few hours in the
+"distressful country," but I found that things had gone from bad to
+worse while we were in the States. I heard from my fellow-travellers
+in the train that "Boycotting" had attained such a pitch in the South,
+that all the relations and conditions of social life were exposed
+to peril, if not destruction. And still, with the usual cheerfulness
+of Irish landlords, accustomed, as it were, to these excesses of the
+popular will, my informants talked of hunting, fishing, and shooting;
+and I heard full accounts of the state of the rivers, and of the take
+of fish which had made some of them happy. The County Cork, indeed,
+had nearly a parallel in the "wild West." But what a contrast between
+the state of public feeling, in respect to the outrages which were
+perpetrated in each, in the country we had left, and that to which
+I had returned! In the United States there was no attempt to justify
+the men who were guilty of such deeds. In Ireland it was impossible to
+obtain evidence or to convict the offenders. I am not going to close
+this narrative of our little excursion with a political disquisition,
+indeed I have not the materials for forming any opinion respecting the
+breadth and depth of what may be called the Irish national movement in
+the United States; but there seems to be a general vague impression
+in America that as the British Government was not very wise and
+equitable in its dealings with the people of the thirteen colonies
+in the reign of King George, it is, somehow or other, at the present
+moment, treating with harshness and injustice the whole of the Irish
+race in Ireland. It is impossible not to recognise the fact that the
+head, perhaps the heart, and certainly the purse of this development of
+Irish discontent are in the United States. The arms, the body, and the
+legs are in Ireland. During the whole time of our visit, although we
+visited towns where eminent orators were lecturing upon Irish subjects,
+and where representatives of the League were in session, there was not
+a trace brought home to us of the strong sympathy which undoubtedly
+exists in many American cities with the movement in Ireland. There
+were accounts of the meetings in the newspapers, and now and then a few
+leading articles on the subject; but we might have concluded, from what
+we saw and heard generally, that the Irish question was of far less
+importance to the American people than the religious views of Colonel
+Ingersoll, or the discussions between the railway companies respecting
+their fares. The recital of wrongs, most of which have been long ago
+redressed, still reaches the ear and touches the heart of the American
+public, and if the Irish population had not in many ways provoked or
+excited the antagonism of the native Americans in the towns, and of
+the Teutonic element which exercises such a powerful influence in
+the country, there would be far greater sympathy for the supposed
+oppression of the Sister Island by England. The fact that emigrants
+come from Europe is accepted as a proof that the countries which they
+leave are ill-governed; and Americans, in dealing with the emigration
+question, are apt to forget the existence and nature of the forces
+which induced their own ancestors to seek homes in the New World.
+
+The _New York Times_ declared in an article last June, that there is no
+essential difference between the two divisions of the Irish in America
+and of the Irish in Ireland. The voyage across the Atlantic works no
+transformation in Pat, and he is still as much an Irishman after his
+plunge into an alien civilisation and taking out his papers as when
+he stood on the old sod in Meath or Tipperary. "He cares no more for
+the American eagle than for an owl; but a sprig of shamrock stirs him
+to ecstasy. The name of Washington has no meaning for his ear; but
+that of St. Patrick is a living and potent reality." That statement,
+however, must be taken with qualification. There are to-day 90,000
+acres of land in Minnesota as thoroughly Irish as if they were planted
+in the centre of Connaught. There are Pats and Pats. Many of the most
+wealthy and prosperous merchants, bankers, and landowners whom we met
+in the West were not merely of Irish extraction, but born Irishmen,
+and the extraordinary spectacle of Irish millionaires who knew how to
+keep their money, and to add to it, too, may be seen in San Francisco
+and elsewhere in the West. Many, less fortunate, have high positions
+either in the army, or as politicians, or in the estimation of all
+that is great and good in America--such as Mr. O'Conor--men who have
+held aloof from politics, and who could not be tempted, even by the
+Presidentship, to enter the arena of party strife. One convicted rebel
+of 1840 now occupies a leading place at the American bar. I heard him
+denounce the Land Bill in terms he might have used in denouncing the
+atrocities of the Saxon in his hot days when O'Connell was king. The
+influence which has been acquired in many parts of the Union by the
+Irish immigration and by the descendants of immigrants has naturally
+excited at various times the opposition and indignation of the American
+born, and it has always been more or less opposed by the Teutons of
+different nationalities who occupy such a powerful position in all
+the great States of the West. But "the Native Party" is now either
+dead or sleeping. A very distinguished officer and politician said
+to me that he had at one time been a most eager and ardent adherent
+of the policy of the Native American Party, but that when he saw how
+earnestly and devotedly the Irish had come forward in defence of the
+Union, how brilliantly they had fought, and how recklessly they had
+sacrificed their lives, in 1861, he felt constrained to abandon his
+principles, and to admit their free right to all the privileges of
+American citizenship. I could not, however, but recollect that General
+Richard Taylor, in his most amusing, able, and graphic work on that
+same war, from the Confederate side of the question, bore the strongest
+testimony to the services of the Irish in the army which fought under
+the banner of the Slave States. In New York and in San Francisco
+the Irish element has exercised almost supreme control in municipal
+matters, and it may be said, without offence I hope, that, whether
+it be owing to the opposition they have encountered or to a radical
+deficiency which may be Irish rather than Celtic, their management has
+not conduced to the comfort of the cities or to the pecuniary purity
+of the Executive. In San Francisco there is a strong anti-Irish press
+and much anti-Irish feeling. The 'Argonaut' repudiates the thraldom of
+the Irish associations and factions in the Far West as strenuously as
+the 'Times' and 'Tribune' do in the East. But notwithstanding all that
+may be written and done, it is impossible to resist the influence of
+numbers under a system of suffrage so large as that which exists in
+the greater number of the American States. It was curious to read in
+a Californian paper an appeal to England to suppress Irish agitation.
+"We confidently believe," says the _Argonaut_, "that the wisdom of
+its public men, the healthful condition of its public opinion, and
+the strength of its military power will be sufficient to crush out the
+Land League movement, which is but incipient rebellion. That England
+will deal justly, firmly, and successfully with this effort of united
+ecclesiasticism and Communism is the earnest wish of every intelligent
+and independent mind that believes in free government, the guarantees
+of property, the rights, and the personal liberty of man." However,
+there are American parties, if not statesmen, whose wishes are by no
+means directed to such a consummation, and we must take note of the
+fact.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great courtesy to
+ strangers--Manners and Customs.
+
+ "Westward the course of Empire takes its way;
+ The four first acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day,
+ Time's noblest offspring is the last."
+
+
+The "tar-water Bishop of Cloyne" would have been exceedingly astonished
+could he have seen the first line of his prophecy or averment made to
+do duty as a motto to Mr. Bancroft's History of the United States; but
+surely if the prophecy be not realised, it will be the fault of the
+agencies engaged in working it out--never in the history of mankind,
+as we know it, have such advantages been enjoyed by any nation as have
+been, and are, the appanage of the Americans of European origin in
+the New World. They have leaped into the possession of their heritage
+full armed, like Minerva from the brain of Jove. For them have all
+the champions of human rights died or conquered, and the protagonists
+of human struggles for liberty and light fought. For them Science has
+trimmed her lamp--for them martyrs have died--for them Europe and Asia
+have been in toil and travail for countless generations, and they have
+been guided across the sea to a grand continent where it would seem as
+if Nature had been engaged for myriads of ages to provide for their
+happiness and grandeur--all climes and all products are theirs--the
+bounteous plain, the ore-filled mountain, the treasures of the deep,
+the heaven-made ways by lake and river, and it would be a despair for
+all mankind if they misuse their glorious inheritance, and if all the
+nations of the world see that the pillar of fire in the west was but
+an _ignis fatuus_ dancing before their aching eyes in a Serbonian bog
+of creeds and 'isms, of factions and faiths, all struggling towards
+the gate of the Temple of Mammon. "Philosophers," in all the doubts and
+fears which the condition of the Republic inspires at times, cling with
+confidence to the palladium which is, they think, to be found in the
+system of education based on the free schools of the States. If there
+were not a distinction between knowledge and morality, they would be
+justified; but the Evil One tempted us to eat of the fruit of the tree
+which brought sin into the world, and if Americans are to be trusted
+as authorities, the result of the largest and most liberal system of
+education ever devised is not as happy in practice as it ought to be
+according to theory.
+
+As the central Government extended its sway over the Territories there
+was a uniform system, when assigning land for public objects to railway
+companies, of retaining for the School Fund a portion of the land
+in each Territory, as it was settled and admitted as such, under the
+control of the central Government. In the States Constitutions creating
+Sovereign States, there are provisions inserted, varying very little in
+language and not at all in spirit, which render it compulsory on the
+Legislature of each State to maintain public schools free to all the
+children of the people residing within its borders. Another principle,
+of universal application, provided that all schools under public
+control should be free from sectarian or denominational teaching, in
+the schools or in the books used for educational purposes. With such
+safeguards for the extension of education, it is depressing to find
+that, in certain districts at all events, crime and immorality prevail
+in the United States as extensively as in the benighted kingdoms of the
+Continent of Europe. But the most serious consideration in connection
+with the system of common schools in America, is the fact that serious
+doubts are intruding themselves respecting the success of it. In a
+recent official report it was stated that whereas the children who
+ought to go to school numbered about fourteen and a half millions, the
+average attendance was not more than five millions. But, assuming that
+all the children went to school, there are people who declare that the
+education given under the National system is by no means satisfactory.
+Mr. R. G. White affirms that the system is a failure; and high
+authorities assert that "any comparison between the results obtained
+in the public schools of New York, Cincinnati, and Boston, with those
+of such public grammar schools of England, as Bedford, Manchester, and
+the City of London, is simply ridiculous." The teachers are continually
+shifting, and when the teachers, as they do in this land of liberty,
+go away, the schools are deserted, the constant services of a staff
+cannot be retained unless there is very considerable increase in the
+rate of payment now made to the male and female teachers. None of these
+in any State have, I think, more than about 9_l._ per month. Mr. White
+says that "the mass of the pupils of the public schools are unable to
+read intelligently, to spell correctly, to write legibly, to describe
+the geography of their own country, or do anything that reasonably well
+educated children do with ease; and they cannot write a simple letter,
+they cannot do readily a simple sum in practical arithmetic, they
+cannot tell the meaning of any but the commonest of words they read and
+spell so ill. They can give rules glibly, they can recite from memory,
+they have some dry knowledge of the various ologies and osophies,
+they can, some of them, read a little French or German with very bad
+accent; but, as to all real education, they are as helpless and as
+barren as if they had never crossed the threshold of a schoolhouse."
+It is from American writers that these accusations against the common
+school system are to be gleaned. Some statisticians say that crime and
+pauperism are increasing far more rapidly than population. The charge
+on the State for punishing criminals and keeping paupers last year was
+$20,000,000, or £4,000,000; but it is too much to attribute crime and
+pauperism to the defects of the schools. It might with more reason be
+argued that the teaching of the people in the schools tends to develop
+the looseness and eccentricity of thought, where there is no religious
+teaching, which are exemplified in the uprising of extraordinary sects
+and strange philosophies; for America is the land of spiritualists,
+mesmerism, soothsaying, and mystical congregations. Mr. Hepworth Dixon
+may not be a perfectly unimpeachable authority on the subject of the
+number of spiritualists in America; but there can be no question they
+are to be counted by millions. It is averred that believers in spirits
+generally believe in "special affinities which imply a spiritual
+relation of the sexes higher and holier than that of marriage." It is
+not wonderful then that there should be also a very large number of
+divorces, especially in the New England States. Mr. Nutting says that
+"in the history of nations there has never but thrice occurred such
+a breaking up of the family tie as is now taking place, especially in
+Rhode Island and Connecticut, among the people of New England blood."
+Mormonism, although of American origin and early growth, has been
+mainly successful by the constant importation of ignorant peasants from
+Europe.
+
+There is a want of reverence on the part of children towards their
+parents which is very striking. Americans who have admitted and
+deplored this have sought to account for it by the school system,
+wherein the State usurps the place of the parent, and teaches the young
+idea to mock at any authority but that of the schoolmaster. It would be
+lamentable to have to admit that free education is associated with the
+weakening of parental influence. Theoretically, there is nothing in the
+American system to prevent the teaching of religious and moral duties
+by parents at home; but it would seem as if very little of that kind
+of instruction was given by the busy fathers and anxious mothers of the
+Republic, and that when the day's work is done at school, and some time
+given to the preparation of the studies for the day to follow, there is
+no further teaching.
+
+I do not think the rule "By their fruits shall ye know them" can be
+applied to the public schools, in connection with the prevalence of
+crime, immorality, unbelief, or eccentric religion. But it is certain
+the system has not by any means secured that high level of general
+education, or what education is supposed to bring with it, which its
+friends claim for it in the States. There is reason to believe that
+the standard of morality has not been uniformly high in the political
+world, and that in the public intelligence the judiciary does not
+aspire to an absolute immunity from suspicion. Even in the old settled
+States, legislators from time to time may be found, who, seated among
+the good and wise, excite admiration akin to that which is aroused by
+the spectacle of a fly in amber. It has been observed by travellers
+that whatever affection may exist in families, it does not attain that
+keen sensibility and lasting power which is found in French domestic
+life.
+
+When American newspapers of the greatest influence and circulation
+write invectives against the corruption which prevails in places
+high and low, when writers of great intelligence and known character
+contribute similar articles to periodicals which possess the highest
+position in the literary world of America, a stranger may be permitted
+perhaps to say a few words respecting the impression produced upon
+his mind by what he heard and read on the subject when he was in
+the country, without it being alleged that he attempts to assail
+the principles of free government, or to make invidious charges or
+wholesale accusations against a nation. I know too well the force with
+which Americans could retort if they were so minded, and how they could
+point to the reports of election judges which set forth the prevalence
+of extensive bribery, led to the suspension of writs, and will perhaps
+end in the disfranchisement of some ancient and populous boroughs and
+constituencies in England, and to the speeches of Sir Henry James in
+Parliament, to cast any stone out of my glass house on that score;
+but I do not think it can be established that persons in a position
+at all analogous to that of the members of a State Legislature have
+been purchased wholesale in England, Ireland or Scotland, or that even
+a complete Borough Corporation had been bought up. Now, nothing was
+more common in the Far West than to hear it stated openly that Senator
+So-and-so had bought his place, and that Mr. So-and-so had purchased
+a State Legislative body in order to "get through" some railway or
+other scheme. That was accepted in fact as a matter of course, and
+not contradicted or questioned by any one. We heard from time to time
+of the sums which So-and-so would expend to buy his senatorship, and
+of the money actually paid to secure the passage of a line from the
+legislature of O---- and the like, whilst stories relating to the
+purchase of judges were common in the conversation of the hotels and
+cars.
+
+I do not aver that these stories were true. I only know that they
+passed current and were not challenged by those who were around us.
+"Thoughtful persons," who exist in the United States as well as in
+the vicinity of Pall Mall clubs, lament, deplore and hate the evils
+of growing corruption with all the fervour of honest and powerless
+natures. The mechanism is scarcely concealed. It stands before the
+world with less attempt at disguise than the gallows in the gaol. Mr.
+Parton, in the 'North American Review' of this July, writing on the
+power of public plunder, says: "At present, in the ninety-fifth year
+of the Constitution, we are face to face with a state of politics of
+extreme simplicity, of which money is the motive, the means and the
+end. What was the last Presidential election but a contest of purses?
+The longest purse carried the day, and it carried the day because it
+was the longest. Some innocent readers perhaps have wondered why the
+famous orators who swayed vast multitudes day after day and night after
+night, have not been recognised in the distribution of office. They
+were paid in cash from ten dollars a night to a thousand dollars a
+week." And then he goes on to describe the business in detail, and to
+show what this power is. He says: "There is a boss in the city of New
+York who will take a contract for putting a gentleman into Congress.
+Pay him so much and you may go to sleep, wake up and find yourself
+member elect. A boss is a man who can get to the polls on election
+days masses of voters who care little or nothing for the issues of the
+campaign and know of them still less. They operate upon the strangers
+in the land who are unable to use its language and are unacquainted
+with its politics." Mr. Parton describes with humour one of these
+"bosses," an improvement on the pugilists and cormorant thieves of a
+remote period. "The Emerald Isle gave him birth; the streets of New
+York, education. To see the brawny, good-tempered Irishman walking
+abroad in his district when politics are active is to get an idea
+of how the chief of a clan strode his native heath when a marauding
+expedition was on foot. He lives in a handsome house, and has more
+property than any man has ever been able to get by legitimate service
+to the United States. He treats his dependants and retainers nobly, but
+as the agent and organiser of spoliation he is a prey to every minor
+scoundrel, for at certain seasons he dare not say no to any living
+creature. And yet it requires tact, self-possession and resource to
+move about among needy people with a pocket full of money, an embodied
+"yes," and have some of it left after the election. The strikers, as
+they are called, go for solid cash now instead of target companies and
+clambakes for which the candidates paid the bills." "Money, money,"
+exclaims Mr. Parton, "everywhere in politics, in prodigal abundance,
+money, except where it could secure and reward good service for the
+public, hecatombs for the wolves, precarious bones for the watchdogs."
+The details in the article are precise, and if they are to be trusted
+it may be doubted whether the claims of the United States to possess
+a cheap government can be maintained, for it is not cheap to pay
+responsible executive officers a precarious pittance per annum if
+now and then it costs a million dollars to change them. Mr. Secretary
+Blaine has thrice declared that the election in October 1880 in the
+State of Maine, a model New England State, was carried by money. His
+opponents declared that he and his party were as bad, and that they
+too flooded the towns with money. What renders the situation more
+dangerous is the fact that the men who provide the money for running
+these enormously expensive political combinations are either seekers
+after, or holders of, office, and the inference is that they seek to
+control Government, or, as Mr. Parton puts it, that "the Government
+is coming to be rather an appendage to a circle of wealthy operators
+than a restraint upon them." That is indeed a serious proposition, and
+the result of observation goes to support the idea that it is valid.
+The small man is in office, but the big man, his master, is outside.
+The mischief is brought prominently forward in connection with the
+sale of public lands in the North-West, which have been claimed as the
+heritage of the people, and indeed of all the nations of the world. The
+government land attracted the hardy labour of all countries, covering
+the western west with thriving towns and populous counties. But now
+the prairies are skinned by rich men, by "land-grabbers," people who
+buy up tracts of twenty thousand or thirty thousand acres wherever
+they can lay their hands upon them, evading the law and filling the
+western world with roving labourers who work on these prodigious farms
+in summer and starve in winter. This is, we are told, the result of
+"government by lobby."
+
+Occasionally there is an exceeding great and bitter cry over all this
+from the depths of the body politic. Some great paper in a moment of
+deep mental agony publishes an article like that, to which I have
+called attention, by Mr. Parton; occasionally some preacher, nobly
+daring, thinks it necessary to direct attention, from his pulpit, to
+the progress of corruption. Dr. Talmage delivered a very remarkable
+discourse whilst I was in America on the text from Job. xv. 34: "Fire
+shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." Although I do not profess
+exactly to understand to what particular sect he belongs, he is one of
+the leaders of religious thought, dividing with Beecher and others the
+popular favour in the Empire City. The State buildings at Albany ought
+to be heavily insured if the reverend gentleman's vaticinations are
+right. It was an American discourse. I cannot give the whole oration.
+The people of the Brooklyn Tabernacle were presented with a muster-roll
+of the people who had distinguished themselves amongst the great ones
+of the world. Cobden, Brougham, O'Connell and Rowland Hill were placed
+in juxtaposition as leaders on our side of the water. Of course it was
+impossible to resist the allusion to Francis Bacon and to Macclesfield;
+but it was scarcely correct to say that the Lord Chancellor
+Whiteberry--I presume a misprint for Westbury--"perished," nor do I
+quite understand what the preacher meant by the awful tragedy of the
+_Credit Mobilier_. Washington, Ben Butler, and John McClean were linked
+together for the benefit of Americans. They were, Dr. Talmage declared,
+great politicians, but "out of politics there has come one monstrous
+sin, potent and pestiferous, its two hands rotten with leprosy,
+its right hand deep in its breeches pocket. This is bribery." Dr.
+Talmage called upon the American people to judge the crime. "Under the
+temptation of this sin," he exclaimed, "Benedict Arnold sold the fort
+in the Highlands for thirty-one thousand three hundred and seventy-five
+dollars; Gorgy betrayed Hungary, Ahitophel forsook David, Judas killed
+Christ. I think," he says, "when I see the strong men who have gone
+down, of the Red Dragon in Revelation, having seven heads and ten
+horns, and seven crowns upon its head, drawing the third part of the
+stars of heaven after it." And therefore he proceeds to preach against
+bribery. He thought it was the right time, "because the Legislature
+in New York is busy in investigating charges of bribery. The whole
+country woke up in holy horror at the charge that two thousand dollars
+had been offered to influence a vote in the Legislature, as if this
+was something new; as though in one State nine hundred and seventy-five
+thousand dollars had not been paid a legislator of the State Government
+by a railway company to get its charter and secure a dedication of
+public lands; as though three-quarters of the legislators of the United
+States had not, through bribery, gone into putrefaction whose stench
+reached heaven. After a few weeks' hunting the squirrel has stolen the
+hickory nut. Gentlemen in New York hunt out wrong by day and play poker
+and old sledge at night at Delavan House. It was like the country which
+had spent six millions of dollars in lawsuits about William Tweed going
+suddenly into hysterics when it found out that he had stolen a box of
+steel pens. California is submerged in the grip of a great monopoly; in
+Kansas United States senators had been involved in charges of bribery;
+in Connecticut an election to Congress was bought as men might buy
+a box of strawberries. Last year they were convicted of attempting
+bribery in Pennsylvania, but the Court of Pardons liberated them with
+the exception of two judges, who were told that they would be cut off
+from political preferment for their obstinacy. A Pennsylvania United
+States senator used to put a price on legislators just as a Kentuckian
+puts a price on his horse." But it was not legislators alone that Dr.
+Talmage attacked. He declared that the railways, the common carriers
+of the country, were tainted by a favouritism which was, in fact,
+the result of bribery. One company made rebates in its fares to some
+favoured corporation, as in the case of a petroleum company, which
+was enabled to control the price of that light all over the world in
+consequence of a virtual monopoly that was given to it by arrangement
+with the railway. In the same way merchandise in grain, provisions,
+and cattle are placed in the hands of a few firms. "How much," asks
+Dr. Talmage, "did it cost the Elevated Railroad to keep the fare from
+dropping to five cents from ten cents? I have been told," said he,
+"three hundred thousand dollars," which is 60,000_l._ "Very seldom
+does a bill pass through any of our Legislatures if there be no money
+in it. Sometimes the bribery is in bank bills, sometimes in railroad
+passes, sometimes in political preferment, sometimes by the monopolies
+given to the legislators, what are called points, a corner, a flier, a
+cover, washing the street, salting down, ten up! If you want to know
+what these are, ask the bribed members at Albany and Harrisburg."
+Then he goes on, with some truth, to declare that the bribery begins
+far away behind all this; that it is really with the money subscribed
+for election expenses that the evil begins its course. "From the big
+reservoirs of subscribed election expenses the little rills roll down
+in ten thousand directions, and by the time the great gubernatorial,
+congressional, and presidential elections are over, the land is drunk
+with bribery." Perhaps it is quite as well that it is from an American
+orator and from an American writer such statements and such indictments
+proceed, rather than from a stranger like myself; but it is very clear
+that the evil which De Tocqueville indicated long ago has spread rather
+than diminished, and there is reason to think that it will do so until
+the public conscience of a great people is aroused to a sense of the
+enormity of the mischief. But it lies far down towards the base of
+the national institutions, and any attempt to extirpate it will fail
+until the doctrines of the "Spoils to the Victors" be rejected from the
+political catechism, and the interests of party made the means and not
+the end of political life.
+
+The letters which appeared in the _Morning Post_, written under
+the influence of the surprise and anger I felt at the extent and
+impunity of crimes of violence and the state of feeling, or want of
+it, respecting them in the West, were badly received in America, and
+were severely handled by a few papers, as I was informed; I expected
+that the mention of the subject would not prove agreeable, though
+I guarded myself most sedulously from a single offensive word--nay,
+went out of my way to palliate the offences against life and living,
+and to excuse the people who allowed them, whilst I most carefully
+drew the line--a broad one--between these border ruffians and the
+law-abiding, virtuous people of the settled States. I was not, however,
+prepared for misrepresentation. One would have thought that I accused
+the kind hosts who had received us--our generous entertainers in
+so many cities--the courteous, polished gentlemen who accompanied
+us--of murder and robbery, and ascribed to them the brutal murders
+committed by Canty or the Kid. As I quoted chapter and verse, and as
+the papers which vilified me could not deny the statements, they wrote
+that I had been imposed upon by the vivid fancy--in other phrase,
+the deliberate lying--of their brother editors in the West. One organ
+had the effrontery to declare that the Duke of Sutherland expressed
+his delight at the kind and courteous treatment of the ruffians I
+denounced; adding, "somebody lied--it was not the Duke." No. It was not
+indeed! A friend sent me one of these, and below an article in which it
+was said that I might take my place "beside Basil Hall, Mrs. Trollope,
+and Dickens for libelling the people of the United States," and that
+my stories were all inventions, there was a pregnant commentary as
+follows:--"Sunday, July 17th: Daring Train Robbery; Bandits Boarding
+Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Cars; The Conductor and a Passenger
+Shot Dead, and the Safe in the Express Car Robbed; the Passengers Saved
+by a Brakeman."
+
+I hope it will not be imagined that I have any desire to cast obloquy
+on the grand efforts, supremely successful as they have been, to
+turn the prairie and the desert to the uses of civilised man and
+of the world, and to open up the Western Continent to humanity and
+civilisation. I am too sensible of the courtesy, ready service, and
+hospitality everywhere accorded to the party of English travellers
+of which I was one, to write one word which I thought calculated to
+give pain or offence to any of our many friends or to any right-minded
+American. _Maculæ solis!_ 'Tis a pity they are there! In a few years,
+perhaps, the memory that such things were will have passed away like
+the recollection of some evil dream. But public sentiment must make
+itself felt, and above all there must be some abatement of the maudlin
+sympathy, which is virtually on the side of crime, if it be active in
+averting punishment.
+
+Crime in America, especially in the Eastern States, is very much
+the same as it is in other countries, but in the far West there is
+more recklessness in dealing with human life, which, in spite of the
+Howard Society and of humanitarians, I believe to be connected with
+the indulgence extended under State laws by American judges and juries
+to criminals who appear to be deserving of nothing but the strict
+and unmitigated application of the rope. "Property" is safe, for the
+citizens hunt down with extraordinary energy marauders whose object is
+simply plunder. Ordinary robbers and gangs of burglars are speedily
+and summarily suppressed. It is otherwise with those who assail life
+and limb. The desperadoes who infest the "saloons," as they are called,
+with which every western settlement is sure to be provided as soon as
+the shingle roofs are placed on the earliest upheaval of deal planks
+which can be called a dwelling, have far greater immunity and freedom
+than burglars or robbers. Wherever the train stopped for water on
+our journey in New Mexico, Western Colorado, or Eastern California, a
+rectangular wooden box, with a verandah, open doors, windows screened
+by a muslin curtain, perhaps a flagstaff with the Stars and Stripes
+flying, a large signboard, and some high-sounding name--the "Grand
+Alliance," "Union League," "El Dorado," "Harmonium," "Arcadia," or
+the like--was visible, with the usual group of booted and bearded
+miners, and their horses hitched up at the door-posts in front; inside
+you would be certain to find men of the same class at a bar, behind
+which, known for miles around, the affable Charlie, Bill, or Bob was
+dispensing drinks and mixing cocktails, slings, and the other drinks,
+in which the badness of the spirit is artfully disguised by a stimulant
+of a more active character and more pronounced flavour, known as
+"bitters," and kept in subjugation by the liberal use of ice. For even
+in these burning regions ice is stored up as the one thing needful. The
+rudest miner is accustomed to it; iced drinks are consumed by classes
+in America far below the social level of those who never taste them in
+this country.
+
+As the train was halting at Colorado Springs the stewards engaged
+in an animated discussion respecting a certain erection of poles and
+rafters just visible in an adjacent field. "I tell you dat's it." "I
+say tidn't." They were discussing the probability of the scaffolding
+being the gallows whereon "Canty, the Buena Vista murderer," was to be
+hanged the day after. On April 29th, last year, Mr. Canty was standing
+on the platform in front of Lake-house with "Johnny the Ham," "Curly
+Frank," and "Off Wheeler," when Thomas Perkins appeared in an alley
+opposite, endeavouring "to induce 'Dutch Bill' to go with him to the
+office of Justice Casey, who had deputised him for the purpose." Canty
+and his companions at once ran across and demanded his release. Before
+Perkins could answer, Canty fired and missed him. The second shot
+wounded Perkins in the arm; the latter drew his pistol, but before he
+could use it Canty fired; the ball shattered the constable's hand. "For
+God's sake," he exclaimed, "is there no policeman to help me?" He fell,
+and Canty, walking close to his side, coolly sent a bullet through
+his body. He was arrested, tried, and convicted. His counsel applied
+to the Supreme Court for a _supersedeas_, but the court, after solemn
+argument, refused the application. Then they applied to the Governor
+of the State, but Mr. Pitkin, though "a weak-kneed man," would neither
+grant a reprieve nor a commutation to imprisonment for life. There
+was, he said, no ground "to set aside a verdict of a competent jury
+and the district judge reviewed and approved of by the Supreme Court."
+In the very last hour a woman came forward, and the Denver paper gave
+_verbatim et literatim_ the text of the document in which ... "with dew
+regard," she offered Sheriff Spangler $50,000 (10,000_l._) to save the
+life of W. H. Canty, her cousin, whose real name was, she said, N. H.
+Salisbury. "I entreat you to have him spared till you have an interview
+with me." She added that "Jennings and his brother in Leadville would
+pay a still larger sum. You may have ample means for life," &c. A
+gentleman of the press, who came into our train at South Arkansas,
+was present at the execution. Just before the drop fell, Canty, who
+had expressed complete confidence in his ultimate liberation till the
+day before his execution, spoke for fifteen minutes, protesting his
+innocence. Then he exclaimed, "Good-bye, nothing can save me. I have
+faith in the Saviour and a hereafter." The trap was sprung, but to the
+horror of every one, the rope broke at the beam. The murderer's neck,
+however, was dislocated, and "a happy relief was experienced" when
+it was found he had died a painless death. As he was the nephew of an
+eminent statesman it was expected his friends would take action as to
+the disposal of his remains, which were put "in a neat casket at the
+sheriff's expense." In the journal there was a woodcut of the murderer.
+"Before his likeness could be taken holes were bored in the door and
+Canty was lashed to it, and then, when the door was set upright, the
+photographer watched a favourable opportunity when the head and eyes
+were quiet and secured the impression" from which the engraving was
+made. He was not so fortunate as Frank Gilbert, who was sentenced to
+be hanged the following day for a brutal murder, but respited, "in
+order that the proceedings may be reviewed by the highest judicial
+tribunal," by Governor Pitkin at the last moment, "till July 29," the
+day on which Rosencrantz is now sentenced to be hanged. The sheriff,
+Judge Ward, the clerk of the court, and the prosecuting attorney
+joined with others in petitions to the governor on the ground that
+the Supreme Court judges had refused a _supersedeas_ in consequence of
+the defects and informalities of the record of the proceedings in the
+court below. Rosencrantz was respited, and the public, who had been
+expecting a double execution on the 18th of June, were disappointed,
+although they were allowed to slake their curiosity by the sight of the
+condemned men and by testing the ropes in the prison enclosure where
+the scaffold was ready. In the paper which gave the text of Governor
+Pitkin's reprieve there was a heading "Done Brown. Al. Huggins,
+marshal of Recene, turns out a bad man. He shoots and fatally wounds
+officer Brown of Kokomo." Phil. Foote, constable of Kokomo, formerly
+marshal of Robinson, and Al. Huggins, marshal of Recene, it seems had
+spent the night in visiting the saloons of Kokomo, and in the early
+morning began to fire their pistols and guns off in the street, and
+continued to do so until Andy Sutton, marshal of Kokomo, attempted to
+arrest them, but failed, "as he was quickly covered by two rifles."
+Mr. Brown, a police officer, asked Huggins to put up his pistol, and,
+to encourage him, proceeded to pocket his own revolver, when Huggins
+took deliberate aim with a 38-calibre Colt and shot Brown in the left
+breast, just above the heart. Huggins and Foote started for Recene.
+The marshal of Kokomo followed quickly in pursuit, with a large body
+of men. Huggins refused to surrender, whereupon the marshal shot him
+in the face. As there was a movement to lynch him, Al. Huggins was
+sent under strong guard to Leadville, but Foote escaped. "Brown was
+not dead by last accounts, but was not expected to live long." Then
+came a long account of another "Denver tragedy. Charles Stickney
+murders Mr. T. Campan and Mrs. H. O. Devereux in a boarding-house."
+Stickney was nephew of ex-Governor Clifford, of Rhode Island, served as
+lieutenant, 20th Regiment, in the war of 1861-4, graduated at Harvard,
+became principal of a school, married a lady whom he sent to London
+to study music, and tried mining whilst his wife was giving music
+lessons in Denver. There she met Mr. Campan, one of the best families
+in Detroit; Stickney shot him and killed a woman who was in the room
+at the same time. "Public opinion is in favour of Stickney, and he will
+probably be reprimanded." The evening of the day we reached Leadville,
+"Alderman Johnnie M'Combe, a leading candidate for lieutenant-governor
+and mayor, and last spring before the people for city treasurer,"
+shot and wounded, probably fatally, a well-known actor named James
+M'Donald, because the latter had taken some children in M'Combe's
+buggy for a drive. It is not easy to determine how far Johnnie's chance
+of office may be affected by this ebullition, but the newspapers did
+not write of it with harshness; one gave it a comic character by the
+heading, "Ex-Alderman M'Combe attempts to perforate Jemmy M'Donald's
+cranium." In my morning paper of the same date I find that "James Hogan
+was foully murdered by James M'Cue in the open streets of Erie this
+afternoon in a quarrel about a handkerchief;" that Dr. Flemings, a
+prominent citizen of Portland, Ashley County, Arkansas, had appeased
+a quarrel between a pedlar named Gillmore and a coloured man very
+effectually, for, "incensed by a remark made by the pedlar, the doctor
+drew a pistol and shot him dead;" that "a prominent business man of
+M'Leansboro' had made a sensation on the streets to-day by hunting
+up, pistol in hand, one of the gay Lotharios of Hamilton County;"
+that "Daniel Keller, deputy county clerk, was stabbed and killed in
+the street of Virginia City by Dennis Hennessy, a kerbstone broker;"
+that "a searching party under Captain Leper had overhauled Hamilton,
+Myers and Brown, the outlaws who shot Sheriff Davis and Collector
+Hatter at Poplar Bluff, Mo.; killed Hamilton, mortally wounded Myers,
+and made Brown a prisoner;" that "James Hurd shot Jeff Anderson at
+Alamosa, Col., and that it was feared the latter would not survive."
+An account of the death of "Curly Bill," a notorious desperado, leader
+of cowboys and murderer of Marshal White, who was killed at Caleyville,
+Arizona, by his comrade, Jem Wallace, followed. They had a quarrel (of
+course, in a saloon). After a few drinks "Curly Bill" said, "I guess
+I will kill you on general principles." Wallace stepped out of the
+saloon and immediately opened fire, inflicting a mortal wound on his
+foe. After a brief hearing Wallace was discharged, and left for parts
+unknown. Then it was related how "Thomas Clarey ('Tommy the Kid'), a
+Durango outlaw, was killed by a comrade named Eskridge at Annego while
+drunk." A fratricide and three trials for murder were duly recorded.
+Another paper gave an account of South-West Colorado from the lips
+of a recent visitor to San Juan County. "Are you going back to San
+Juan? No, I think not; but it is a glorious country. The men there
+are a little rough, and kill each other on slight provocation; but a
+peaceable man who does not swagger and blow is not molested. There is
+no law, and courts and constables are unknown." He narrates how Aleck
+----, acting as a barkeeper, "a noble-hearted, jovial fellow, full of
+fun, who looked you square in the eye, owns mines, said to be worth
+a million," settled a difficulty; I am inclined to think Mr. Charles
+Klunk rather drew on the interviewing reporter of the _Globe Democrat_.
+He was, he said, going to see a stockman who lived about fifty miles
+from the house where he was visiting. A farmer said to him "Come and
+take a drink with me, and I'll show you the barkeeper who killed the
+man you are going to see an hour ago." The stockman had come into
+the saloon whilst Aleck was in the back room, and began to abuse him.
+Aleck heard him, opened on the man with a revolver, and "shot him full
+of holes. Next day I asked him what he was going to do about it, and
+he said he had been tried and acquitted, which meant that some of the
+leading men had told him that he had done right. There was no trial
+about it. When a man kills another out there in a fight they don't
+inquire very strictly into the circumstances, but make up their minds
+that they can't bring the dead man to life by hanging the killer, so
+nothing is done about it. But when a man murders another to rob him,
+the vigilants turn out and have no mercy on him. They just fill his
+skin with lead and tumble him into a hole like a wolf. After all,
+though the bears are plentiful in the spring, you can kill a deer 100
+yards from the house where you like, the streams are alive with trout,
+the vegetables and crops splendid." Mr. Charles Klunk's resolution not
+to go back to this Happy Valley seems founded on sound constitutional
+principles. What I wish to point out is the condition in which the
+Central Government and State Governments have permitted many districts
+of New Mexico, Colorado, and California to remain. It is plain that
+the peculiar conditions under which the sway of the United States has
+been extended over the regions of the Far West have rendered it very
+difficult to establish the machinery for protecting life and property
+and punishing crime; but I do not see that the statesmen at Washington
+or the legislators at the State capitals are very much concerned at
+the reign of terror which prevails on the borders, or that they seek
+to impress on their people any regard for the sacredness of life. In
+fact, human life is almost a drug in the market. And I write fully
+sensible of the failures of our own and of all European Governments to
+repress crime, to prevent violence, and to ensure security to life and
+property. I am aware that Ireland and Poland are to the fore, and that
+wife-beating and "running kicks" illustrate the brutality of Lancashire
+and other districts--that London has its Alsatias, that every European
+capital has foul recesses in which the only laws are those of crime.
+All the world is busy preparing shoals of emigrants for the United
+States. It is only, however, when some savage outbreak affrighting the
+propriety of a great city arouses indignation and fear that there is
+a clamour for measures of repression. I do not think there is in any
+other part of the world, or that there ever has been in any civilised
+country, such shootings as have filled the land to which I allude with
+bloodshed. It may be said with truth that there never have been and
+that there are not any similar conditions in the world. But the absence
+of any great abiding movement for the correction and suppression of
+violence and lawlessness cannot be so readily accounted for or excused.
+There appears to be a sort of admiration for these border ruffians
+among portions of the American Press and public. Even a staid paper
+like the _Republican_, in an article headed "South-East Missouri: the
+Reign of Lawlessness about Ended," on the destruction of the New Madrid
+gang, writes of one who was sent to the penitentiary for thirty years
+"as a living monument of a bold and brave lot of desperate men who had
+started out to make money by robbing their fellow-men. This swift and
+stern justice speaks well for this portion of the States, which has had
+for a long time more than its full quota of these lawless characters.
+Myers and Brown will be hung on the 15th July, and their execution will
+be witnessed by thousands of South-East Missourians." The spectacle
+of the hanging will not do much good, if it be like the execution at
+Colorado Springs, which was advertised as a sort of picnic or pleasure
+excursion. One advertisement ran, "After the hanging to-morrow drink
+La Salle beer; it will cool your nerves." "Highway robbery here has
+about run its course, and the people are determined that lawlessness
+in those regions shall no longer go unwhipped of justice." Very good.
+But, why not sooner and long ago? "Rhodes was hung by Judge Lynch
+when captured at the killing of young Laforge in New Madrid;" but the
+gang killed the sheriff and wounded the deputy-sheriff and collector
+before the people arose in their majesty to squelch them. A criminal
+is invested with a notoriety which, next to popular estimation, is
+valued by some men, and it is noted with interest that "Gilbert" (one
+pitiless murderer) is a Catholic, and that "Rosengrants" (another
+homicide) "inclines towards the Episcopalians." A Leadville doctor
+visits one of them to ask for his body. "No, sirree, you can't have
+my body; I'll be hanged first!" And the public laugh at the lively
+sally, and admire the _sangfroid_ of the wit! In fact, there is a
+_tendresse_ for crime in this grim humour. A Texan who would "fill the
+skin" of a stranger "with lead" for aspersing Texas would no doubt
+heartily enjoy the description of the early population of the Lone
+Star State, which I quote from the Texas Press. "In the early days
+of the Republic, and even after annexation, many of the white men who
+came here had strong sanitary reasons for a change of climate, having
+been threatened with throat disease so sudden and dangerous that the
+slightest delay in moving to a new and milder climate would have been
+fatal, the subjects dying of dislocation of the spinal vertebræ at the
+end of a few minutes--and a rope. A great many left Arkansas, Indiana,
+and other States in such a hurry that they were obliged to borrow the
+horses on which they rode to Texas. They mostly recovered on reaching
+Austin, and many invalids began to feel better and consider themselves
+out of danger as soon as they crossed the Brancos River. Some who would
+not have lived twenty-four hours longer had they not left their homes
+reached a green old age in Western Texas, and were never again in risk
+of the bronchial affection already referred to by carefully avoiding
+the causes which led to their trouble. Some at Austin recovered so
+far as to be able to run for office, within a year, though defeated
+by a respectable majority, owing to the atmosphere and the popularity
+of the other candidate." The most extraordinary fact connected with
+the indulgence which is extended to Western excesses is the severity
+with which Northern and Eastern writers and publicists deal with
+the recklessness of Southerners with regard to life, as if it were a
+political question in some way connected with slavery. In an article on
+"Colonisation," in the July number of 'The International Review,' there
+is an attempt to prove that the prevalence of homicide in the South as
+compared with the North has impeded the flow of immigrants, although
+slavery has disappeared, and the writer, quoting Mr. Redfield's book
+on 'Homicide North and South,' says the terrible "scourge of open
+murder, wholly irrespective of political causes more deadly than
+disease or yellow fever, because each death is the result of a heinous
+crime, seems to be calmly accepted by public opinion as a part of
+the unchangeable conditions of social life in the South. In Kentucky
+more men are killed in six days than in eight years in Vermont. In a
+village of Connecticut a death from homicide has never occurred from
+its foundation, while in one graveyard in Owen County, Kentucky, the
+majority are murdered men, and in another county forty-two persons
+were killed and forty-three wounded in two years." But in the very same
+number of the 'International' there is an account of the doings of the
+"Vigilance Committee" of San Francisco (where there were no slaves and
+where there is immense wealth), which might cause the author of the
+paper on "Colonisation" to reflect a little on his theories. Surely in
+Arizona, California, &c., where the foreign population is 50 per cent.
+of the natives, immigration has not been checked by the prevalence of
+homicide? It must not be supposed that there is no "law" in the towns
+where these crimes have been committed; in all the cases referred to
+the coroner did his office and verdicts were returned, and it will have
+been seen that "wretches hang" in due course. We had intended to visit
+the State prison at Cañon City on our way to Pueblo from Leadville,
+where we were promised an opportunity of seeing "thirty murderers all
+in a row," but the delay of the train on the road deprived us of the
+means of verifying the statement, and I give it as it was made. It
+would seem as if the criminal supply were super-abundant, or that death
+on the gallows had no deterrent influence. The chances of escape are,
+if not numerous, at least considerable. At Deming, Denver, Leadville,
+Tucson, Tombstone, and other cities, the vast mass of the inhabitants
+are law-abiding, peaceable, honest, and honourable men, who feel as
+much horror at the violence and bloodshed around them as the most
+refined lady in any saloon of Boston, Paris, or London, but they appear
+to endure these things in the hope that the law will be enforced at
+last; now and then they break into vigilance committees and execute
+their own decrees, though the judges do not fail to lay it down that
+they have been accessories to murder. The great civiliser and police
+agent is the railroad. It is affirmed that as the iron way is pushed on
+the outlaws and the _personnel_ of outlawry congregate at the terminal
+town, but I suspect that there is a fringe of the material left on the
+border as it runs. As our party were at dinner in the palace-car one
+evening the train pulled up at a station. There was a group of rough
+men on the platform, who stared in with all their eyes at the white
+tablecloth, set with bright glass and silver, and at the cheerful faces
+under the lamps. "How merry they are. I wonder if they know that this
+is Dodge City?" exclaimed one of the crowd. I was told by an official
+that when they were making a railway in these parts the surveyors, &c.,
+were much troubled by gangs of gamblers and robbers, who impeded the
+work and debauched the men, so after due warning they made a razzia
+on the gamblers, shot a lot of them, and the rest "vamosed." There was
+not very long ago an actual war in the Grand Cañon Valley between the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railway and the Denver and Rio Grande
+Railway, in which there was an array of armed forces and fighting on
+both sides, and we saw with our own eyes the remains of the breastworks
+cast up in the Grand Cañon by the belligerents. The law came in at
+last. "One side got at the judge first and gave him $50,000. The
+other was quite ready to go beyond that, but the first was too quick,
+and the suit went against the company." I was talking to a lawyer
+about the length of time which is allowed by the judges to criminals
+sentenced to death as a detail of the execution of the law not in
+accordance with the general practice of civilised nations, when one
+of the company remarked, "They must do it, sir, to please the people.
+If we had Judas Iscariot in gaol to-morrow there would be thousands
+of petitions to commute his sentence, and thousands of dollars ready
+for an appeal to the Supreme Court. Our people don't like prompt
+sentence." Nevertheless, sentence and execution are pretty swift when
+the desperadoes take the law into their own hands, as we have seen.
+The revolver and the "saloon" are the agents and the scene in most of
+these murders, and whisky is too often the motive power. In Kansas it
+is a criminal offence to sell any intoxicating spirit, or to use it
+except on medical certificate. It is said that the law cannot last, but
+it surely was a very strong conviction of the evils which were endured
+by the community that brought a State Legislature, elected by the
+people, to enact that beer, wine, and spirits should be absolutely and
+entirely banished from its borders. Lately there was a prosecution by
+the State attorney of a man for selling spirits. The case was clearly
+proved. The judge charged the jury in the strongest manner against the
+defendant. The jury without retiring at once found a verdict of "not
+guilty." "Boys," exclaimed the judge, putting his hand on the foreman's
+shoulder, "Boys, I'm quite with you." The Kansas case will be, I think,
+watched with great interest by the rival parties in England, and it is
+certainly worth investigation and attention, for, if all I hear be true
+here, a Parliament elected by the people either in advance or in the
+rear of their constituents have passed a law which judges condemn, and
+juries evade, and public opinion derides.
+
+From a British, which may be an unintelligent, point of view, there
+is a want of logical method in the treatment of the Great Rebellion
+question by Americans. There is a general disposition to speak of the
+war between the Federal Government and the people of the Confederate
+States as an historical fact which has ceased to present burning
+controversies and terrible issues to the Republic. But, at the same
+time, these controversies are kept alive, and, for the defeated, are
+stirred up incessantly by anniversaries and celebrations, natural but,
+if it be the object of Americans, as many of them assure us it is,
+to let the memory of the past die out like that of a horrid dream,
+impolitic. The spirit which animated the Southern States is neither
+dead nor sleeping. But there are no end of G. A. P. and G. A. R.
+Associations flourishing their banners and waving their sheathed swords
+in and out of the newspapers, and it is almost more than Southern
+flesh and blood can bear at times to be reminded of the defeats they
+sustained, even if they be content to admit that the doctrine of the
+sovereignty of States was a delusion, and that the indivisibility of
+the Republic was a fundamental principle of the Constitution before it
+was conclusively established by force of arms.
+
+North and South, our good cousins are fond of anniversaries and
+speechmakings. I wonder where they get their taste for them from?
+Some few veterans dine together on anniversaries of old French war
+days, and there is a Balaclava Dinner in the Old Country; but, though
+we have a reasonably long list of fighting successes to commemorate,
+their anniversaries are mostly left to the almanacks. The other day
+the Americans had a celebration of the Battle of Cowpens, wherein the
+heroic Morgan gave the diabolical Tarleton the deuce of a whipping. I
+wonder if it was worth remembering? But it is better to remember such
+things perhaps than Sherman's Raid or Wilderness--or Chickahominy.
+There are bitternesses enough remaining--the rivalries and jealousies
+of generals are still active and these memories might be left to die
+out.
+
+The great war which so deeply moved the population of the United States
+has left many traces in Soldiers' Homes, and men deprived of legs or
+arms, or bearing marks of indelible wounds, are to be met with wherever
+there is any considerable gathering of people all over the Union. The
+clerk at the bar of the hotel, to whom we were talking a moment ago,
+was a captain in a regiment of militia, and served with distinction,
+having risen to the grade he occupies by conduct and courage during the
+war; and if he is known among his friends by the title of "Colonel,"
+he deserves, probably, the brevet conferred upon him by the authority
+of the general public around him. The conductor of the train on the
+Pennsylvania Railroad, to whose attention we were so much indebted, was
+an ex-officer of volunteers, was engaged at the first battle of Bull
+Run, where he was wounded, and in several other actions. And our good
+friend the Major, who enabled us to pass many an hour listening to his
+admirable rendering of negro minstrelsy, bore in his body a proof of
+the dangers he had passed, in the shape of a Confederate bullet, or
+it might have been (for I am not quite sure now) a projectile of the
+Federal persuasion. And so on. Scarcely a day passed that we did not
+meet someone who had been fighting on one side or the other.
+
+One great change has come over Americans since I was last here, and,
+whether it was the ridicule to which they were exposed or to a sense
+of their greatness as a nation that it be due, it is to be commended.
+Except by a professional interviewer, not one of the party was asked,
+"What do you think, sir, of our country?"!
+
+The welcome which an Englishman who is entitled to admission into
+good society receives all over the States, in the best houses, and
+from the best men, is as gracious and warm as ever. It seems as if a
+reaction against the suspicion, jealousy, and harshness which marred
+the political relations of the Republic and Great Britain in times gone
+by, moved those who behave with so much courtesy to Englishmen, and
+that they seem to say, _sotto voce_, "Come and see how I forget the
+wrongs done to the United States by the Ministers of George III. and
+his successors! Admit that I can be as magnanimous as I am rich and
+cultivated! I am of your house, but I have transplanted all the good
+qualities of your race to American soil, and grafted them on the tree
+of liberty which towers aloft in all the splendour of Transatlantic
+luxuriance above us."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the
+ Maori.
+
+
+On the 5th of May the party visited Carlisle Fort or Barracks, one of
+the ancient military establishments of the Republic, where in the old
+times, speaking in an American sense, a considerable force was usually
+concentrated to keep watch and ward over the western frontiers, now
+extended thousands of miles away to the Pacific. The Barrack, which
+is a large quadrangle capable of containing a couple of regiments, is
+appropriated by the Government to this great experiment, the systematic
+education of the Indians of both sexes, whose families send them to
+school for the purpose of learning English and useful arts, mechanical
+and other, which may be of advantage to their people. It was, perhaps,
+one of the most interesting of the many little excursions which the
+Duke of Sutherland and his friends made in the States, and as it was
+the only one of the schools which we had an opportunity of seeing I
+shall proceed to give a little account of what we witnessed. In the
+first place let me express the sense which every one of us entertained
+of the real sterling qualities of Captain Pratt who is in charge of
+the school, and of the devotion and solicitude for their charges of
+those ladies employed in the training establishment. It may be asked
+how casual visitors could judge of these things? The discipline,
+order, progress, and perfect method visible in every room, and the
+intelligence and good understanding between the teachers and the pupils
+which could be perceived throughout the establishment, were adequate
+proofs, I think, that the praise is well deserved. At the time of our
+visit there were something under three hundred pupils, of whom perhaps
+two hundred were boys, and these were engaged in their class-rooms,
+each section of Indians being arranged according to nationality, if
+such a term can be used. But, indeed, the tribes of Indians differed
+from each other in personal appearance far more than do the races
+which inhabit the European continent. It is true they nearly all have
+straight wire-like black hair and eyes set deeply and rather obliquely
+in faces which are frequently of the Mongol type. But there is great
+diversity in the shape of the head, the angle of the jaw, the formation
+of the mouth and nose, the colour (when not tainted or "improved" by
+an admixture of European blood, whether Mexican or American or other)
+being pretty uniform, a rich bronze, with something of a copper hue,
+predominating in the young people. The boys were dressed in a plain
+neat uniform of greyish-blue, military tunics and trousers, well shod
+and comfortably equipped in all respects. The girls, amongst whom,
+perhaps, taste for eccentric finery was not unobservable, wore dresses
+less uniform in appearance, generally neat and always clean; but
+their foot gear was rather eccentric. The rooms, spacious barrack-like
+apartments, well ventilated, were appropriated to the classes according
+to age and progress, the boys being separated from the girls. The walls
+were hung with maps and furnished with educational coloured prints, and
+boards for arithmetical exercises were in each apartment. The desks and
+stools were such as would be seen in an ordinary school, and if one had
+not looked at the faces of the pupils and been struck by some of the
+strange characters on the walls he would have thought himself in the
+middle of some ordinary school; save, perhaps, that his ear would have
+missed the curious humming noise which marks the industry of idleness
+or of legitimate work in similar establishments in Europe. But here
+were all these young savages, poring over their books or boring with
+their pens, looking up at the visitors scarcely with curiosity and
+applying themselves again to their work, or answering questions put
+to them with the composure which must be a portion of the Red Man's
+nature.
+
+I cannot recollect how many tribes there were represented at the
+Carlisle school; but I was struck by the race-distinctions which could
+be observed when Captain Pratt, standing on a raised platform, called
+out the names of each tribe. The little batches, in some instances
+only one or two, stood up briskly and looked somewhat proudly about,
+as much as to say, "We are Sioux (or Apaches, or Ponchas, or Creeks),
+not like these other fellows." And the young ladies were, if one might
+judge from their expression, quite as proud of their own people as the
+boys. But the names these poor children receive are ludicrous. Not
+content with calling them by English names, or American, singularly
+misapplied, very often, as a name may be, their own Indian nomenclature
+is translated into English, so that we heard reading and reciting
+beside "Luke Phillips" and "Almarine McKillip" (a Scotch Creek)
+"Maggie Stands-looking" and "Reuben Quick-bear." There was something
+of sarcasm, I think, in the address of a Creek boy to the visitors. He
+said: "The Indian boys had come here to learn something about the use
+of the bow and hunting. Their people believed that if boys grew up to
+manhood without learning they would be of no use; therefore they had
+sent the boys here to get education." Then, after some moral if trite
+reflections, the lad said: "You must understand that nearly everything
+that was made was made both for the present and the future. This
+barracks was not built for Indians, as I do not think the men who built
+it ever thought that it would be an Indian school; but things were made
+to do good both in the present and in the future." And then quoth he,
+looking at his white friends straight in the face: "The education which
+we are getting here is not like our own land, but it is something that
+cannot be stolen nor bought from us." And the white man did not turn
+red at the words! I do not pretend to judge of the actual progress made
+in learning, but the very intelligent self-possessed teachers reported
+uniformly that they were satisfied. The most useful education, perhaps,
+which these Indians receive is in practical mechanics, and a visit to
+the workshops attached to the barracks was amply repaid by the sight
+of these industrious young fellows hammering and leathering away in
+the various departments. They have actually completed waggons of a most
+satisfactory construction, complete in all their parts, so much so that
+orders have been received for as many as can be supplied for the use
+of Agencies. They make and repair their own shoes. They have sent out
+a hundred and twenty double sets of harness. They make coffee-boilers,
+cups, pans, pails, and all the articles known to the tin-smith; and the
+girls are taught to hem and sew and knit in the English fashion; but it
+must have been not many a long year before the white man landed, when
+the ancestors of these Indian maidens exercised the same mystery with
+fine sinew and skin in the wonderful work of which specimens are handed
+down to us to-day. On one point alone, perhaps, there was something to
+regret; the health of the children was not all that could be desired.
+Well clad, regularly fed, I presume on wholesome food, cleanly lodged
+in well-ventilated rooms, these wild children of the plains scarcely
+came up to the expectations one would form of them in the matter of
+chest-measurement; and although many were remarkable for fine physical
+development, Captain Pratt confessed that their sanitary condition was
+not everything that could be desired, and that losses from consumption
+and other causes were rather serious. But they have plenty of out-door
+exercise. They have games in which they rejoice. They drill and
+march to the sound of their own band, a very good brass band of eight
+performers, each of a different tribe, who played "Hail Columbia!"
+and the "Star-Spangled Banner," and the like, with energy and zest;
+nay, with harmonious concurrence. When we went out into the large open
+square, there appeared before us a wonderful being in feathers, waving
+plumes, wampum and all the leathern panoply and peltry adornments of
+an Indian, painted, and armed with bow and arrow, probably such an one
+as Captain John Smith may have seen as he went exploring the woods
+of Virginia on his way to the sacrifice from which he was saved by
+Pocahontas. A target was erected at a distance of a hundred yards or
+so, and had I been in the centre of it, I should have been perfectly
+safe from the arrows which the Indian warrior discharged at it. But
+we were told that with a good bow a strong-armed Indian will drive an
+arrow right through a buffalo, and in that case I would suppose that
+the buffalo was very near to him indeed.
+
+Of course it is but natural to find very varying degrees of
+intelligence amongst the pupils, and the rate of progress was by no
+means uniform, but a committee of examination which recently visited
+the school declared that the manifestations of advancement in the
+rudiments of English education were to them simply surprising. It was
+with admiration bordering on amazement they observed the facility and
+accuracy with which the children passed through the various exercises,
+in reading, geography, arithmetic, and writing, of the schoolroom;
+the accurate training and the amount of knowledge displayed were, they
+reported, the fullest proof not only of skilful teaching, but of great
+aptitude and diligence on the part of the children. Considering the
+brief period during which the school had been in operation, and the
+fact that the children entered it in a wholly untutored condition,
+the evidence was conclusive of the capability of culture. They go on
+to say: "We are fully persuaded that improvement equal to that which
+we have witnessed in the case of these children of the plains, if
+made in equal time by American children, would be regarded as quite
+unusual. And when the difficulty of communication consequent upon the
+diversities of language is taken into account we can but feel that the
+results of which we have been the witnesses to-day justify our judgment
+of them as amazing."
+
+One of the most interesting features connected with the attempts
+to educate the Indians at Carlisle is the 'School News,' a little
+publication which, as I understand, is conducted by Indian pupils
+taught in the establishment, edited by Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee Indian
+boy. It is published once a month, and costs 25 cents or 1_s._ per
+year. It takes as its motto the lines:
+
+ "A pebble cast into the sea is felt from shore to shore,
+ A thought from the mind set free will echo on for ever more."
+
+Perhaps neither the metre nor the actual statement commend themselves
+to acceptance, but the matter of the little journal is full of
+interest. In the first place the names of the contributors afford
+full matter for meditation. Perhaps it is one of the steps which
+must be taken to civilise these poor Indians that their names should
+undergo a strange and, to me, unmeaning metamorphose. There seems no
+reason whatever why the Indian names should not be retained, or if
+there is any reason for changing them, at least there might be some
+discrimination and good taste exercised in the adoption of English
+Christian names.
+
+The first number of the 'School News,' which I have before me, contains
+as an article: "What Michael Burns, an Apache boy, thinks on the Indian
+Question." He says, "I cannot help myself, having much feeling for my
+people, what has been said about them, and the efforts making to give
+us the same privileges as the people of the United States. And it is
+said how we have been treated by the bad white man, for the last ten
+or fifteen years, decreasing our number. But that kind for treatment
+for my nation will soon stop." The poor boy goes on to say: "There is
+no doubt that we are in fault. We had the opinion that we could not
+get beaten by any other nation. Now we know for ourselves that we will
+have to change.... But how does the white man know which way is the
+best to do. Was he born that way? No! Education gives him the light
+of knowledge." Then a boy named Marcus Poko writes to his father: "I
+want you to try hard and leave the Comanche way, and to find the white
+man's way." In the leading article, written, I presume, by Samuel
+Townsend, it is said: "Indian ways will never be good any more, it
+is all passed, gone away, and the other way is coming up to take the
+place. We shall all be glad when we all get into the civilised way of
+living, then the Indians will not make so much trouble for the American
+people. Some people say 'let the Indians get out of the way. There
+is no use in trying to advance them, kill them all they are like the
+wild animals deaf and dumb, they never will learn anything. We have
+already paid so much money for them they have never become civilised
+yet.' But all good people say, 'Oh, yes, give them an education and
+plenty of opportunities, and send more teachers among them so they may
+come up beside us and live as brothers and live in peace.'" There is a
+little paragraph as to language. "There are a great many words in the
+English," says the writer, "that the Indians have no word for, so the
+white people who make the Indian books have to make new Indian words.
+So the Indians have to learn the new Indian words. Now we don't know
+much about it, but we believe the Indians can all learn to speak the
+same as the whites." Then there is a column about the school news:
+"Lizzie McRae, a Creek girl, made a very good corn bread the other
+day. We had some of it. It was right good I tell you." "Robert American
+Horse is a steady boy. He works in the blacksmith shop very well, and
+Mr. Harris never has to tell him but once how to do something." "One
+of the teachers had artificial violets on her belt. A Gros Ventre boy
+saw them, but did not know what they were, so he got up from his desk
+and went close to the teacher. He looked at it and then smelt it. When
+he smelt it he said, 'Pooh! rags!'" "Boys, some time ago Captain Pratt
+gave us advice about throwing stones at birds. Some of the boys who
+understand most English did not listen. We want the birds to come and
+stay with us and sing for us, too. Let us remember about this, and
+not let Captain Pratt have to say it again." "Last Sunday some of the
+large girls had a prayer-meeting in the yard at the back of the girls'
+quarters. Nobody told them to do it, but they thought it would be a
+good thing." There is a long letter from Lizzie Walton, a Pawnee girl
+of thirteen years old, describing a trip to Philadelphia, and I believe
+there are very few girls of thirteen years of age in any school who
+could write more amusingly or better. The account of a magic lantern by
+Ada Bent, a Cheyenne girl, closes the number.
+
+Letters from the children who are sent out to the farmers are published
+in this little periodical, and give a very pleasing picture of the
+lives and aptitudes of these Indians. Virginia, of Kiowar, writes from
+a farm, asking one of the teachers to pardon her for not having done so
+before; but "I have not much time," she says, "I am very busy set the
+table and wash dishes make my bed and make pies and cakes and try to
+make bread too, and the other things beside.... Sometime I make fire
+and bring in wood. Mrs. Borton is very kind lady she has two children
+one girl and boy. I love these little children very much." "My dear
+Miss H----, I am not bad a girl. I help now a great deal. I pray for
+you almost every night, also when I wake up in the morning. I like to
+pray very much because I make myself good." And so on in a pleasant
+little gossiping way, frequently in very difficult language. There is
+an article in the 'School News' of July upon the shooting of President
+Garfield: "The man who shot him," says the writer, "we suppose, thought
+he would please some of the people in the United States. He thought he
+was very smart. If President were to die how would every white man,
+black man and the Indian feel? It was not in war when the President
+was shot, for our country don't have war any more, but in peace....
+We all feel sorry because the President is suffering. We hope he
+will soon recover." It is stated that about a hundred boys and girls
+have gone out to work on the farms, and there are some trite remarks
+about the advantages of hard work as opposed to the disadvantages of
+laziness. "The farmers up country say the Indian boys can bind wheat
+first-rate." "Nelly Cook, Sioux, made 36 sheets in one day last week.
+Nellie Cary, Apache, made 32, and Ella Moore, Creek, made 30. Boys, do
+you think those girls are lazy?" The 'School News' has a reporter, it
+would appear, for the paper says that "Our reporter took a walk round
+in the shops to see what the boys were doing. In all the shops every
+boy was busy. In the carpenter shop there were Jock (Arapahoe), Ralph
+(Sioux), Elwood (Iowa), and Joe Gun (Ponca) sawing out window and door
+frames. Oscar (Cheyenne) and Michael Burns (Apache) were busy carving
+balcony posts; and Lester (Arapahoe) was outside chiselling a beam.
+These things are all for our new hospital.... Jesse (Arapahoe) and
+Little Elk (Cheyenne) were busy in the gymnasium. The waggons which
+Robert American Horse has finished painting are to be sent to Oregon
+and Washington Territories." It is sometimes difficult to make out
+the meaning of the little prattle which these small people commit to
+the uncertain medium of the English tongue; but, on the whole, it is
+a most interesting and curious study. In one respect these children
+of the forest possess that which civilisation seems rather to dwarf
+amongst men of the highest culture and imagination--a certain stately
+eloquence and nobility of expression, in which natural images abound,
+and allegory and metaphor consort together in excellent and tasteful
+union. In a paper called 'Eadle Keatah Toh,' which seems to have been
+the precursor of the 'School News,' there is an interesting report
+from the Committee on Indian Affairs to the House of Representatives,
+submitted by Mr. Pound. The motto of the paper is "God helps those
+who help themselves"; but surely it might be better put that God will
+help those who seek to do good to the unfortunate Indians, who in
+contact with civilisation are rendered utterly helpless, and who in
+their attempts to help themselves according to the manner of the race
+must meet with nothing but extinction. From time to time there are
+notices of deaths. One would like to know who wrote the account of the
+"death of John Renville, son of Gabriel Renville, Chief of the Sisseton
+Sioux." After noticing the circumstances under which he contracted his
+fatal illness--fever, produced by drinking water at a spring on a hot
+day on a march to the camp in Perry County, the writer says:--"'Death
+loves a shining mark,' the poet sang long ago; and in the passing away
+of John Renville from our school we sadly say, how truthfully the poet
+sang.... Through all the days of his sickness his large sorrowful eyes
+had a far-away wondering look, no pain marred the beauty of his brow,
+and his voice as he addressed his sister, who tenderly watched over
+him, was like the trumpet warbling of some mournful bird. Our hearts
+follow the father in deep sympathy as he bears back the body of his
+beautiful boy to the land of the Dakotas for burial."
+
+The Indian chiefs have a right, which they often exercise, of visiting
+these schools as a Board; and there is an account in the Carlisle paper
+of the visit of Spotted Tail, Iron Wing, White Thunder, Black Crow,
+and Louis Robideau from the Rosebud Agency; Red Cloud, American Horse,
+Red Dog, Red Shirt, Little Wound, and Two Strike from the Pine Ridge
+Agency; Like the Bear and Medicine Bull from the Lower Brule Agency;
+Son of the Star, Poor Wolf, Peter Beauchamp, and John Smith from Fort
+Berthold; Two Bears, John Big Head, Grass, Thunder Hawk, and Louis
+Primeau from Standing Rock; Charger and Bull Eagle from Cheyenne River;
+Brother to All and James Broadhead from Crow Creek; Strike the Ree
+and Jumping Thunder from Yankton; Robert Hakewashte and Eli Abraham
+from Santee Agency; Mr. Tackett and his wife and daughter; a daughter
+of Spotted Tail, and others. The meeting of the children with their
+parents is described as being most touching; and sometimes the pupils
+were not recognised, so greatly had they altered. As the chiefs seemed
+unwilling to speak when called upon to do so, there was silence for a
+time till a little girl, who had been about a year and a half at the
+school, expressed her desire to speak in so earnest a way that General
+Marshall permitted her to do so; and so, speaking in her own dialect,
+her words were translated into English and into Sioux. She declared
+that she liked the white man's ways and the white man's language.
+Indian words, she said, were down on the ground, but the white man's
+language was in his head. The chiefs, who listened attentively, seemed
+to understand this curious figure of speech, and nodded their approval.
+And then she enlarged upon the advantage of what she learned, and
+implored the chiefs to send their children to the school, where she
+says she is going to try to be God's daughter. Her words seemed to
+kindle the fire within the chieftains' breasts, for Like the Bear, a
+Sioux, and father of one of the boys at Hampton School, came forward
+and addressed the meeting. "There is no greater power in the world,"
+said he, "than the Great Spirit, and we must listen to Him and do
+what He wants us to do. When the men who were sent out by the Great
+Father the President asked for my children I gave them up. I see you
+are making brains for my children, and you are making eyes for them so
+that they can see. That is what I thank the Great Spirit for, and it is
+that which will make me strong." Then Robert Hakewashte, a chief from
+the Santee Agency, spoke, and said that he wanted schools like that
+which he saw here on his own reservation, and Spotted Tail wished for
+the same thing. "Since I have learned the words of God," he says, "it
+makes no difference to me what is the colour of a man's skin; if he
+walks like a man it is the same. I do not believe God likes the white
+colour only. God likes red and white, for He made them all." And then
+the flood of eloquence was loosened, and an old chief of the Sioux,
+nearly blind, verging on ninety years of age, who had come to see his
+grandson, said: "I grew up a red man, and the things I see here I never
+had a chance to see before. I have heard about the white man's church
+and his religion, and I have heard about the holy house. I have looked
+into them, and I am very much pleased. But there is only one Great
+Spirit we all can worship, and the red men all over the country are
+hearing about it. You are teaching the children to worship the Great
+Spirit. That is a great thing, and I like it. But you have here two
+sons of one father. One is sick. I want you to keep the other." And so
+he carried him away.
+
+The condition of the Red Man who is allowed to exist under the banner
+of the Republic is a subject which has attracted the attention of the
+best and wisest men in the United States. The treatment of the Indians
+is a question of future policy. It is one which must exercise a very
+deep and abiding influence on the whole history of an ancient and
+interesting people. But it is exceedingly difficult to put in a short
+compass its most salient points before those who are unacquainted with
+the nature of the problems to be solved. Comparisons are odious, above
+all places, in America, when they are not to the advantage of the Great
+Republic, and I shall not draw any between the state of the Indian
+tribes in Canada and in the States. But it may be fairly admitted that
+the Indian Question in Canada is divested of many of the difficulties
+which surround it south of the lakes. The people of Canada have far
+more land than they know what to do with. They are a sparse population.
+They are not impelled to fierce adventures by mining "booms," and they
+are altogether less progressive than their American brethren. Shall we
+say that they are more charitable, more humane, less greedy of other
+men's goods? I do not say so. But at all events it is perfectly true
+that the Red Man, although he is dying out under the influence of
+whiskey and other influences which need not be particularised, in his
+native land, lives in comparative peace and comfort under the British
+flag in Canada. He is content with the White Mother. He pursues the
+occupations dear to his race as a hunter and as a fisherman. He is a
+dealer in peltries, and in such small barter as his needs require. He
+is the companion of sportsmen, and he delights, free as mountain air,
+to hunt on the hillside and in the prairie in winter over the vast
+ranges of snowy fields which in the few short months of spring and
+summer teem with flowers, and the frosty lakes which yield fish to his
+spear and net. There are few or no railways through his reservations
+to vex his repose, no great trains of miners with pick and rifle to
+drive away the moose and the buffalo, and hand the native hunter over
+to starvation. The Indian gives to the white man all he needs, and aids
+him in obtaining from the wide stretch of land over which he roams all
+the wealth that it can afford. Practically one part of the Dominion
+is handed over to the Red Man and to the half-breeds, for there is an
+Indian frontier which as yet has not been much encroached upon by any
+large migration of whites. As far as I know, conflicts north of the
+Saint Lawrence between Indians and whites are unknown, or have not
+been heard of for very many years. South of the great lakes, in the
+wonderful land over which is displayed the banner of the stars and
+stripes, the fate of the Indian is very different. In the words of Mr.
+Carl Schurz, himself an expert in the question, "the history of the
+relations of the United States with the Red Man presents in great part
+a record of broken treaties, of unjust wars and of cruel spoliation."
+That is a sweeping statement, which it would be just as well for
+an Englishman not to make, but coming from the mouth of an American
+citizen and of a United States Minister with plenty of evidence to back
+it, there can be no harm in recording my conviction of its truth. It is
+but another indictment against a defect in the form of government which
+Americans exalt as the most perfect of human institutions, that the
+central government made treaties in good faith with the Indian tribes,
+but was unable to enforce their obligations or to maintain their
+integrity. There is, as all well-informed people know--well informed,
+at least, in reference to American affairs--a commissioner who makes an
+annual report to the Secretary of the Interior respecting the Indian
+tribes in the various locations over the Union and the Territories.
+The last of these reports which I have seen is that of the Acting
+Commissioner Mr. Marble, addressed to the Department of the Interior
+from the office of Indian Affairs at Washington in the November of
+last year. The volume contains the reports of the agents in the Indian
+Territory; of the schools for Indian children established in pursuance
+of a wise and humane policy, and detailed statistics in relation to the
+Indian settlements and reservations, the latter indeed forming by far
+the largest portion of the volume of 400 pages. Before I call attention
+to the condition of the Indians, and the efforts made to save them from
+extinction or from a degradation worse than annihilation, I should like
+to direct the attention of those who are interested in the subject
+to the view which is beginning to find favour, I believe, among the
+most experienced men in the States, that the system of "Reservations"
+is founded on a mistake the magnitude of which is demonstrated every
+day, and that the only means of saving the Indians from extinction is
+their gradual absorption as educated communities in the agricultural
+life of the nation, keeping them far as may be from the white man,
+but making no other distinction between them and the other citizens
+of the United States than such as must be found in the nature of the
+Indian race and their degree of culture and civilisation--treating
+them, in fact, as communities of Mennonites, Mormons, or Norwegians,
+or other nationalities would be treated in the United States. When
+the Reservations were first established it was considered impossible
+that the migration of the whites would extend to the remote regions of
+the west to which the unfortunate survivors of the people with whose
+virtues and vices Cooper and other novelists have made us familiar were
+gradually and often remorselessly driven. It is a plea which will be
+urged in bar of judgment that the doctrine of States Rights prevented
+the interference of the United States Government on behalf of the
+Indian tribes who were often ruthlessly destroyed. But it will scarcely
+be a plea, I think, which humanity in full court would recognise as
+valid. _Homo homini lupus._ But to the Red Man as to the Black in many
+cases the White Man is worse than any wolf; far more bloodthirsty and
+rapacious than any tiger--a Cain of Cains. It was our own kith and kin
+who, landing on the shores of the North American continent, encroaching
+by degrees upon the tribes and at last encountering their hostility,
+spread their sway literally by fire and sword, and rooted out the
+Red Man wherever they found him established on land or by sea which
+they coveted. We, whose countrymen have worked out the same policy on
+the Australian continent and Van Diemen's Land, and who can only be
+restrained from its pursuit in New Zealand by the strong arm of the
+Home Government, can scarcely afford to take up stones to fling at our
+American brethren; and it is not with any purpose of indictment or
+accusation that I proceed to make a few remarks on the relations of
+the United States Government with the Red Man, and the efforts which
+they have been making to compensate the Indians in some measure for the
+injustice and persecution dealt out for many a generation.
+
+As I looked at the men gathered at some of the railroad stations in
+the western desert and thought of the Red Men whose fate it is to
+meet such representatives of civilisation and Christianity, I could
+not but be filled with pity for the unfortunates and with wonder at
+"the dispensation" under which they live. The faces are fine and bold
+enough, bearded to the cheek or shaved in the American fashion, with
+bold staring eyes, which "look square" in your own, with a general
+expression "Do you want a fight?" in them--the heads to which they
+belong are generally set on muscular bodies. If a gang of these men
+think fit to go on to an Indian reservation--the very name is too often
+a bitter mockery--who is to stop them? If the Indians try to do so and
+one of the white intruders is killed the country-side rings with cries
+of "vengeance for the massacre of our brethren," and all the papers are
+filled with accounts of "Another Indian Outbreak."
+
+"The average frontier-man in the States looks," as Mr. Schurz says,
+"upon the Indian merely as a nuisance in his way. There are many
+whom it would be difficult to convince that it is a crime to kill an
+Indian." I will go further and say that there are many, I believe, who
+would take great pleasure in killing an Indian whenever they could;
+or as one gentleman observed to me, and I believe in his relations
+with white men no more just or honourable man or more humane could be
+found, "I would sooner kill an Indian than I would a skunk." When I
+was in the West, there was a cry raised that the Utes were about to
+wage war, and appeals appeared in the local papers for a military force
+to march against them. Their leaders were accused of arrogance and of
+insolence, and of murderous designs, and the general remark one heard
+was, "The Utes must go." I inquired a little into the matter when I got
+back, and I found that the Utes were strictly and absolutely, in their
+own right, standing upon the titles, which they had derived from the
+United States Government, to the lands from which they were required
+to move. These lands were wanted. Other lands were pointed out to them,
+to which they objected, and then they were informed that they would be
+moved by force, and preparations were made to levy war against these
+unfortunates, if they resisted deportation from the territory which
+had been assigned to them by the Great Father. Had they been Irish
+landlords, they could not have been treated worse; but in the West not
+one word was raised in favour of their claims.
+
+The first point which has to be considered is, that the Indian is
+obnoxious to the very class of men with whom he is by the necessity
+of things most closely brought in contact. The railway has been the
+great persecutor of Red Men. It has driven away the game, it has
+carried in proximity to their reservations all the enterprise charged
+with whiskey, revolver, rifle, and greed, which can be furnished by
+the offscourings of the world. In the Far West the miners in advance
+throng into the valleys, and break the silence of the mountain-ranges
+by the sound of their picks, the cattle-raisers spread out over the
+plains, the ploughman settles down on the fertile land. "What," asks
+the American philanthropist, and his question is echoed all over the
+world by humane and good men, "what is to become of the Indian?" The
+hunting-grounds are gradually being pushed farther west and north
+until they are bounded by the sea, and by the eternal snow. And if by
+any chance it should be found that there is gold or lead, silver or
+iron, or copper, or coal in any abundance, even under these unpromising
+conditions it will be sought. The buffalo is disappearing fast, faster
+than the Indian himself. Deer are becoming scarcer every year. What
+is to be left for the Red Man? Pastoral life and agriculture, say
+the philanthropists. The substitution, however, is not so easy. The
+weakness of the United States Government is the main cause why the
+policy of reservations has failed. Let us take the account of it by a
+United States Minister. "The Government," says Mr. Schurz, "has tried
+to protect the Indians in good faith against encroachments, and has
+failed. It has yielded to the pressure exercised upon it by people in
+immediate contact with the Indians. When a collision between Indians
+and whites once occurred, no matter who was responsible for it, our
+military forces were always found on the side of the white against the
+savage. How was Government to proclaim that white men should for ever
+be excluded from the millions of acres covered by Indian reservations,
+and that the national power would be exerted to do so?" Such an
+idea the American Minister thinks would be utterly preposterous. The
+rough and ready frontier-man would pick quarrels with the Indians;
+the speculators would urge him on. Government could not prevent
+collisions; the conflict once brought on, Government, in spite of its
+good intentions and sense of justice, would find itself employing its
+forces to hunt down the Indian. The old story would be repeated, as it
+will be wherever, says Mr. Schurz, there is a large and valuable Indian
+Reservation surrounded by white settlements, "and unjust, disgraceful
+as it is, that is an inevitable result." Such being the case then,
+the United States Government being powerless to see that right shall
+be done, and it being at once a human and a Christian duty to avert,
+if possible, the extinction of the original possessors of this grand
+continent, let us see what can be done to carry out the object. Fit the
+Indians, it is said, for the habits and occupations of civilised life;
+give them individual possession of land as property, a fee-simple title
+to the fields they cultivate, guarded by an absolute prohibition of
+sale--because it has been found that whenever the Indians are exposed
+to the temptation of artful traders, they will be cajoled out of the
+titles they have to their land--and you will save the remnants from
+utter destruction. I hope it will be so. I could not but feel a glow
+of enthusiasm when I heard the Attorney-General, Mr. MacVeagh, at
+Washington, speaking incidentally one day about some railway matter,
+declare that he would not sanction the making of a line of railway
+through Indian Territory until he was satisfied that the Indians
+actually understood the conditions which had been offered to them by
+the company. "I will," said Mr. MacVeagh, "send down government agents
+there to ascertain that the Indians thoroughly understand what they
+are doing, and that it is of their own free will and consent that the
+railway passes through their territory in exchange for the money and
+goods they receive for the concession." Excellent and just minister!
+But, alas! I believe that ere I left the United States the whole thing
+was done; the railway company had declared that they would, whether
+or no, make their line, and if an Indian touched a hair of the head of
+any white man, the United States Government would not be able to avert
+the Divine wrath of every white man on the border from the whole of
+the tribe. Well may Mr. Schurz say that the thought of exterminating a
+race once the only occupants of the soil, where so many millions of our
+own people have flourished, must be revolting to every American who is
+not devoid of all sentiments of justice and humanity. Extermination or
+civilisation is the alternative offered to the Indian. Now let us see
+how it is proposed to civilise them. According to the returns in the
+Report for 1880, the number of Indians in the United States, exclusive
+of those in Alaska, is 256,127. Of these, 138,642 are described as
+wearing citizen's dress. It will be observed that there is no estimate
+given of the Indians who do not wear citizen's dress under this head.
+Citizens must be sometimes very badly dressed indeed if the Indians I
+saw at various stations along the line to San Francisco in shocking
+bad hats and tattered clothes were to be included amongst those who
+figured under this description in the report of the Commissioner. About
+17,000 houses are reported as occupied. There are 224 schools, attended
+by 6000 scholars for a month or more during the year, scattered over
+the continent. About 34,550 Indians could read. There were 154 church
+buildings and 74 missionaries. The number of children of school age was
+34,541; but this was an under estimate. Of these there was only school
+accommodation for 9972. The total amount expended for education during
+the year by the United States Government was $249,299; by the State of
+New York, $15,863; by the State of Pennsylvania, $325; by other States,
+nothing; by religious societies, $46,933; by tribal funds, $7481.
+22,048 Indian families were engaged in cultivating farms or small
+patches of ground; 33,125 male Indians were labouring in civilised
+pursuits; and 358 Indian apprentices had been pursuing trades during
+the year. This census and these statistics are stated to be imperfect,
+and it would require a close examination of the returns to enable an
+inquirer to form any idea as to the progress made in the direction
+which we are told is the alternative of destruction.
+
+The Reservations of the various Indian tribes are scattered irregularly
+over the United States; from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota on
+the north and north-west, away to the Territories on the other side
+of the Rocky Mountains, down to New Mexico and Arizona, there being
+none in the southern states bordering the Atlantic. But there are
+Red Men of different tribes located, as the Americans would say, in
+the States to the east, such as New York. The Reservations are of
+irregular size and extent. Isabella, in the State of Maine, reserved
+for 848 Indians, lies to the east of 86° longitude, and south of 44°
+latitude. There is a considerable group of Reservations on the western
+shore of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, and in Minnesota. But the proper
+Indian territory lies west of Arkansas, with the Red River on the
+south, New Mexico on the west, and Kansas on the north; and in it are
+concentrated the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chicasaws, Comanches, Cheyennes,
+and several other tribes. The Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and
+Arizona ranks perhaps next in size, extending northwards into Colorado,
+where the Utes have got a large tract of land assigned to them upon
+what appears now to be very doubtful or vanishing tenure. These, and
+numerous reservations, which it would be tedious to enumerate, are
+under the charge of agents appointed by the Government at Washington,
+as to whose functions and personal character and attainments one
+hears very surprising and contradictory reports. But I confess, from
+a perusal of the documents which they have furnished to the head of
+the Department, and which are published in the Annual Report, there
+seems to me no just ground for imputing to these gentlemen want of
+zeal, knowledge, interest, or intelligence. Those who detest the whole
+work of saving the Red Man are very apt to impute to the Indian agents
+not only corrupt practices in relation to the sale of government
+stores and supplies destined for the use of those under their charge,
+but illicit traffic in spirits, which is ruinous to the Red Man, and
+even some participation in the acts of violence which have frequently
+led to Indian troubles. It all depends upon the manner in which your
+informant in the States regards the Indian Question whether the agents
+are described as scoundrels whom no man could trust, or as gentlemen of
+high propriety and general excellence.
+
+The necessities which have been imposed by advancing civilisation
+of providing Indians with food entail a heavy outlay upon the United
+States Government, which is much begrudged by large sections of members
+of Congress, although they do not see their way clearly to withhold
+supplies of food from the unfortunate people whose hunting-grounds have
+been occupied, and who have not yet learned the arts of agriculture,
+so as to be able to supply themselves with food. The transportation of
+stores, the cost of beef, corn, coffee, bread, tobacco, tea; in fact,
+all kinds of food, woollen goods, clothing, boots, hats, groceries,
+waggons, tools, hardware, and medical supplies,--all these duly figure
+in the estimates of the Indian Commissioner to a very considerable
+amount, and the returns as yet do not present any large reduction on
+the annual charge; although nearly all the agents speak in terms of
+great hopefulness of the extraordinary advance which has been made in
+their agencies in the cultivation of the soil.
+
+One remarkable division of the agencies has reference to their
+appropriation to religious denominations. An Indian might well
+be puzzled as to his form of belief if he were passed through the
+various agencies, attending at each a religious service or two, and
+listening to the teaching of the various divines attached to them. The
+Society of Friends have control of the belief and religious teaching
+of the Sante and Nemaja Indians in Nebraska, and of the Pawnees in
+the Indian Territory; to the Methodists are assigned three tribes in
+California, three tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, three
+in Montana, two in Idaho, and one in Michigan. The Nevada Cherokees,
+Creeks, Choctaws, Chicasaws, and Seminoles are handed over to the
+Baptists. The Presbyterians have charge of the Nezpercès in Idaho,
+Umtas in Utah; the Apaches, Pueblos, and two other tribes in New
+Mexico. The Congregational Church exercises its religious offices
+among the tribes in Wisconsin, among two tribes in Dacotah, and one
+in Washington Territory. The Reformed Church has its work cut out for
+it in Arizona amongst four tribes. The Protestant Episcopal Church
+exercises its jurisdiction over one tribe in Minnesota, six tribes in
+Dacotah, one in Indian Territory, and one in Wyoming. The Unitarians
+have apparently only one tribe in teaching, the Los Pinos in Colorado.
+The United Presbyterians have one tribe in Oregon; the Christian Union
+has another in Oregon; the Evangelical Lutheran has charge of the
+Southern Utes in Colorado; and lastly, the Roman Catholic Church has
+two tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, one in Montana,
+and two in Dacotah. As a general rule, the reports of the missionaries
+themselves are more sanguine, as they are wont to be, than are those
+of disinterested, perhaps unprejudiced, observers of their work. But,
+as is natural, the actual progress made depends very much, not only
+upon the nature of the tribe among whom the work is carried on, but
+on the character of the missionary, and on his ability and energy. In
+some instances, I see the condition of a tribe is reported as being
+lamentable, from a religious point of view, whilst in a neighbouring
+reservation, it is stated that great progress has been made in the
+establishment of religious teaching and ideas. The Rosebud Agency is
+said to prosper in the hands of one reverend gentlemen; the fathers of
+St. Ignatius are described as doing good work amongst the Flatheads;
+the Pawnees are left without any missionaries at all, and, says
+the government report, "are probably better off without them." And
+depreciatory remarks are slightingly introduced concerning the work at
+other agencies. On the Devil's Lake Agency, the majority of the adults
+shun the missionaries as they would the gentleman who may be supposed
+to own the lake by the sides of which they are encamped. The Jesuit
+fathers and the Catholic sisters are described as working generally
+with zeal and success, whilst one agency assigned to the Methodists
+is said to have no religious agency at all. It is to the success of
+the attempts made to educate the Indians at the public establishments
+that the philanthropist and humanitarian must look with the most
+hopefulness.
+
+All the reports of the teachers and visitors of these schools coincide
+in one point, that the young Indian is most teachable, and that in
+respect of acquiring knowledge he is, if anything, the superior of the
+white, who seems to enjoy no hereditary excellence in his capacity for
+acquiring knowledge. The Bill to which the Report was an introduction
+may be considered indeed as the Magna Charta of the Indian tribes
+if it be followed up by judicious treatment, and careful management
+of and consideration for the rights conferred upon these tribes as
+preliminary to their absorption as citizens in the mass of the nation,
+when they are fit for such an amalgamation with the white races. The
+advance of the United States westwards has left vacant many military
+posts and barracks, stranded, as it were, high and dry in the midst of
+the torrent of civilisation. Fort Bridger, Wyoming; Carlisle Barracks,
+Pennsylvania; Fort Craig, New Mexico; Fort Cummings, in the same
+territory, and a number of others, have been named as suitable for
+the purpose of educating the Indian children; and it was in pursuance
+of the measure recommended to Congress that the various agencies
+throughout the Indian Territories were directed to forward children
+whom their parents might wish to entrust to the officers of the United
+States for education. "Received in the rudest state of savagism," says
+the Report, "their progress is already most remarkable." I have already
+remarked that the health of the boys is not generally satisfactory.
+Their sanitary condition is bad; and it would appear that sometimes in
+these long and tedious journeyings from the remote Indian agencies the
+poor children suffer much.
+
+Even at the present moment the Anglo-Saxon appears to be dealing with
+the Maori in New Zealand very much as he has dealt with the native in
+Tasmania and in Australia. The history of our relations with the New
+Zealand chiefs and people is not in a nature to enable us to throw
+stones at the Americans with impunity, for the glass house in which
+we live can very easily be reached. Some sixteen or seventeen years
+ago a rebellion, arising out of the aggressions of the white settlers
+on the lands of the Maori, was averted by a Proclamation and by Acts
+confiscating a large tract of Tallinassey, which became theoretically
+the property of the Crown. Of course the natives had as little to say
+to that as the lady who is mentioned in 'Tristram Shandy' had with the
+declaration that "she was not related to her own child." But they did
+not recognise the occupancy, and whenever a white man settled upon
+a portion of the ground they pulled down his fences and removed his
+landmarks. The contest is still going on, but no one who is acquainted
+with the history of the colony will doubt what the end will be; and
+it is coming soon, or it is to come, the moment the colonists are bent
+upon taking the land, and when it is desired to do so.
+
+"It but feebly expresses the judgment formed from what we have observed
+to say that we regard the experiment made in this school to educate and
+improve Indian children as in every way a very remarkable success." _Si
+sic omnes!_ Why does not the United States Government, or if not the
+Government, the people, abounding in wealth, full of pious impulses,
+humane, charitable, who justly say that the worst use you can make
+of an Indian is to hang him; why do not the political economists who
+declare that it costs a million of dollars to get rid of an Indian with
+gunpowder and lead; why do not the enterprising and wealthy capitalists
+who desire to appropriate Indian Reservations all combine to extend the
+work of these schools so as to absorb all that remains of the Red Man
+in the rising generation amongst the citizens of the great Republic? A
+blessed work, worthy of an imperial State, truly great and truly good!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+LONDON:
+
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED.
+
+STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+
+
+
+A Catalogue of American and Foreign Books Published or Imported by
+MESSRS. SAMPSON LOW & CO. can be had on application.
+
+Crown Buildings, 188, Fleet Street, London,
+January, 1881.
+
+
+ A Selection from the List of Books
+ PUBLISHED BY
+ SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON.
+
+ALPHABETICAL LIST.
+
+
+_A Classified Educational Catalogue of Works_ published in Great
+Britain. Demy 8vo, cloth extra. Second Edition, revised and corrected
+to Christmas, 1879, 5_s._
+
+_About Some Fellows._ By an ETON BOY, Author of "A Day of my Life."
+Cloth limp, square 16mo, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Adventures of Captain Mago._ A Phoenician's Explorations 1000 years
+B.C. By LEON CAHUN. Numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra,
+gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, 5_s._
+
+_Adventures of a Young Naturalist._ By LUCIEN BIART, with 117 beautiful
+Illustrations on Wood. Edited and adapted by PARKER GILLMORE. Post 8vo,
+cloth extra, gilt edges, New Edition, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Afghan Knife (The)._ A Novel. By ROBERT ARMITAGE STERNDALE, Author of
+"Seonee." Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+_After Sundown; or, The Palette and the Pen._ By W. W. FENN, Author of
+"Blind-Man's Holiday," &c. With Portrait of Author. 2 vols., crown 8vo,
+cloth extra, 24_s._
+
+_Albania: A Narrative of Recent Travel._ By E. F. KNIGHT. With some
+very good Illustrations specially made for the work. Crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Alcott (Louisa M.) Jimmy's Cruise in the "Pinafore."_ With 9
+Illustrations. Second Edition. Small post 8vo, cloth gilt, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Aunt Jo's Scrap-Bag._ Square 16mo, 2_s._ 6_d._ (Rose Library,
+1_s._)
+
+---- _Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo's Boys._ Small post 8vo,
+cloth, gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._ (Rose Library, Double vol. 2_s._)
+
+---- _Little Women._ 1 vol., cloth, gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._ (Rose
+Library, 2 vols., 1_s._ each.)
+
+---- Old-Fashioned Girl._ Best Edition, small post 8vo, cloth extra,
+gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._ (Rose Library, 2_s._)
+
+---- _Work and Beginning Again._ A Story of Experience. 1 vol., small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, 6_s._ Several Illustrations. (Rose Library, 2
+vols., 1_s._ each.)
+
+---- _Shawl Straps._ Small post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Eight Cousins; or, the Aunt Hill._ Small post 8vo, with
+Illustrations, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _The Rose in Bloom._ Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Silver Pitchers._ Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Under the Lilacs._ Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5_s._
+
+---- _Jack and Jill._ Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5_s._
+
+"Miss Alcott's stories are thoroughly healthy, full of racy fun and
+humour ... exceedingly entertaining.... We can recommend the 'Eight
+Cousins.'"--_Athenæum._
+
+_Alpine Ascents and Adventures; or, Rock and Snow Sketches._ By H.
+SCHÜTZ WILSON, of the Alpine Club. With Illustrations by WHYMPER and
+MARCUS STONE. Crown 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._ 2nd Edition.
+
+_Andersen (Hans Christian) Fairy Tales._ With Illustrations in Colours
+by E. V. B. Royal 4to, cloth, 25_s._
+
+_Architecture (The Twenty Styles of)._ Dr. W. WOOD, Author of "The
+Hundred Greatest Men." Imperial 8vo, with 52 Plates.
+
+_Art Education._ _See_ "Illustrated Text Books."
+
+_Autobiography of Sir G. Gilbert Scott, R.A., F.S.A., &c._ Edited
+by his Son, G. GILBERT SCOTT. With an Introduction by the DEAN OF
+CHICHESTER, and a Funeral Sermon, preached in Westminster Abbey, by the
+DEAN OF WESTMINSTER. Also, Portrait on steel from the portrait of the
+Author by G. RICHMOND, R.A. 1 vol., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 18_s._
+
+
+THE BAYARD SERIES,
+
+Edited by the late J. HAIN FRISWELL.
+
+Comprising Pleasure Books of Literature produced in the Choicest Style
+as Companionable Volumes at Home and Abroad.
+
+"We can hardly imagine better books for boys to read or for men to
+ponder over."--_Times._
+
+Price 2s. 6d. each Volume, complete in itself, flexible cloth extra,
+gilt edges, with silk Headbands and Registers.
+
+The Story of the Chevalier Bayard. By M. De Berville.
+
+De Joinville's St. Louis, King of France.
+
+The Essays of Abraham Cowley, including all his Prose Works.
+
+Abdallah; or, The Four Leaves. By Edouard Laboullaye.
+
+Table-Talk and Opinions of Napoleon Buonaparte.
+
+Vathek: An Oriental Romance. By William Beckford.
+
+The King and the Commons. A Selection of Cavalier and Puritan Songs.
+Edited by Professor Morley.
+
+Words of Wellington: Maxims and Opinions of the Great Duke.
+
+Dr. Johnson's Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia. With Notes.
+
+Hazlitt's Round Table. With Biographical Introduction.
+
+The Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia, and the Letter to a Friend. By Sir
+Thomas Browne, Knt.
+
+Ballad Poetry of the Affections. By Robert Buchanan.
+
+Coleridge's Christabel, and other Imaginative Poems. With Preface by
+Algernon C. Swinburne.
+
+Lord Chesterfield's Letters, Sentences, and Maxims. With Introduction
+by the Editor, and Essay on Chesterfield by M. de Ste.-Beuve, of the
+French Academy.
+
+Essays in Mosaic. By Thos. Ballantyne.
+
+My Uncle Toby; his Story and his Friends. Edited by P. Fitzgerald.
+
+Reflections; or, Moral Sentences and Maxims of the Duke de la
+Rochefoucauld.
+
+Socrates: Memoirs for English Readers from Xenophon's Memorabilia. By
+Edw. Levien.
+
+Prince Albert's Golden Precepts.
+
+A Case containing 12 Volumes, price 31s. 6d.; or the Case separately,
+price 3s. 6d.
+
+_Beauty and the Beast._ An Old Tale retold, with Pictures by E. V. B.
+4to, cloth extra. 10 Illustrations in Colours. 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Begum's Fortune (The): A New Story._ JULES VERNE. Translated by W.
+H. G. KINGSTON. Numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ._ L. WALLACE. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Beumers' German Copybooks._ In six gradations at 4_d._ each.
+
+_Biart (Lucien)._ _See_ "Adventures of a Young Naturalist," "My Rambles
+in the New World," "The Two Friends," "Involuntary Voyage."
+
+_Bickersteth's Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer_ may be had
+in various styles and bindings from 1_d._ to 21_s._ Price List and
+Prospectus will be forwarded on application.
+
+_Bickersteth (Rev. E. H., M.A.) The Reef, and other Parables._ 1 vol.,
+square 8vo, with numerous very beautiful Engravings, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _The Clergyman in his Home_. Small post 8vo, 1_s._
+
+---- _The Master's Home-Call; or, Brief Memorials of Alice Frances
+Bickersteth_. 20th Thousand. 32mo, cloth gilt, 1_s._
+
+---- _The Master's Will_. A Funeral Sermon preached on the Death of
+Mrs. S. Gurney Buxton. Sewn, 6_d._; cloth gilt, 1_s._
+
+_Bickersteth (Rev. E. H., M.A.) The Shadow of the Rock._ A Selection of
+Religious Poetry. 18mo, cloth extra, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _The Shadowed Home and the Light Beyond._ 7th Edition, crown 8vo,
+cloth extra, 5_s._
+
+_Biographies of the Great Artists (Illustrated)._ Each of the following
+Volumes is illustrated with from twelve to twenty full-page Engravings,
+printed in the best manner, and bound in ornamental cloth cover,
+3_s._ 6_d._ Library Edition, bound in a superior style, and handsomely
+ornamented, with gilt top; six Volumes, enclosed in a cloth case, with
+lid, £1 11_s._ 6_d._ each case.
+
+ Hogarth.
+ Turner.
+ Rubens.
+ Holbein.
+ Tintoretto.
+ Little Masters of Germany.
+ Fra Angelico and Masaccio.
+ Fra Bartolommeo.
+ Giotto.
+ Raphael.
+ Van Dyck and Hals.
+ Titian.
+ Rembrandt.
+ Leonardo da Vinci.
+ Gainsborough and Constable.
+ Sir David Wilkie.
+ Van Eyck.
+ Figure Painters of Holland.
+ Michel Angelo.
+ Delaroche and Vernet.
+ Landseer.
+ Reynolds.
+
+"Few things in the way of small books upon great subjects, avowedly
+cheap and necessarily brief, have been hitherto so well done as these
+biographies of the Great Masters in painting."--_Times._
+
+"A deserving series."--_Edinburgh Review._
+
+"Most thoroughly and tastefully edited."--_Spectator._
+
+_Black (Wm.) Three Feathers._ Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+---- _Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart, and other Stories._ 1 vol., small
+post 8vo, 6_s._
+
+---- _Kilmeny: a Novel._ Small post 8vo, cloth, 6_s._
+
+---- _In Silk Attire._ 3rd Edition, small post 8vo, 6_s._
+
+---- _A Daughter of Heth._ 11th Edition, small post 8vo, 6_s._
+
+---- _Sunrise._ 15 Monthly Parts, 1_s._ each.
+
+_Blackmore (R. D.) Lorna Doone._ 10th Edition, cr. 8vo, 6_s._
+
+---- _Alice Lorraine._ 1 vol., small post 8vo, 6th Edition, 6_s._
+
+---- _Clara Vaughan._ Revised Edition, 6_s._
+
+---- _Cradock Nowell._ New Edition, 6_s._
+
+---- _Cripps the Carrier._ 3rd Edition, small post 8vo, 6_s._
+
+---- _Mary Anerley._ New Edition, 6_s._
+
+---- _Erema; or, My Father's Sin._ With 12 Illustrations, small post
+8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Blossoms from the King's Garden: Sermons for Children._ the Rev. C.
+BOSANQUET. 2nd Edition, small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+_Blue Banner (The); or, The Adventures of a Mussulman, a Christian, and
+a Pagan, in the time of the Crusades and Mongol Conquest._ Translated
+from the French of LEON CAHUN. With Seventy-six Wood Engravings.
+Imperial 16mo, cloth, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, 5_s._
+
+_Boy's Froissart (The)._ 7_s._ 6_d._ _See_ "Froissart."
+
+_Boy's King Arthur (The)._ With very fine Illustrations. Square crown
+8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._ Edited by SIDNEY LANIER,
+Editor of "The Boy's Froissart."
+
+_Brazil: the Amazons, and the Coast._ HERBERT H. SMITH. With 115
+Full-page and other Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 650 pp., 21_s._
+
+_Brazil and the Brazilians._ J. C. FLETCHER and D. P. KIDDER. 9th
+Edition, Illustrated, 8vo, 21_s._
+
+_Breton Folk: An Artistic Tour in Brittany._ HENRY BLACKBURN, Author of
+"Artists and Arabs," "Normandy Picturesque," &c. With 171 Illustrations
+by RANDOLPH CALDECOTT. Imperial 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21_s._
+
+_Bricks without Straw._ the Author of "A Fool's Errand." Crown 8vo,
+with numerous Illustrations, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+_British Goblins: Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends, and
+Traditions._ WIRT SYKES, United States Consul for Wales. With
+Illustrations by J. H. THOMAS. This account of the Fairy Mythology and
+Folk-Lore of his Principality is, by permission, dedicated to H.R.H.
+the Prince of Wales. Second Edition. 8vo, 18_s._
+
+_Buckle (Henry Thomas) The Life and Writings of._ ALFRED HENRY HUTH.
+With Portrait. 2 vols., demy 8vo.
+
+_Burnaby (Capt.)_ _See_ "On Horseback."
+
+_Burnham Beeches (Heath, F. G.)._ With numerous Illustrations and a
+Map. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._ Second Edition.
+
+_Butler (W. F.) The Great Lone Land; an Account of the Red River
+Expedition, 1869-70._ With Illustrations and Map. Fifth and Cheaper
+Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _The Wild North Land; the Story of a Winter Journey with Dogs
+across Northern North America._ Demy 8vo, cloth, with numerous Woodcuts
+and a Map, 4th Edition, 18_s._ Cr. 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Akim-foo: the History of a Failure._ Demy 8vo, cloth, 2nd
+Edition, 16_s._ Also, in crown 8vo, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+
+_Cadogan (Lady A.) Illustrated Games of Patience._ Twenty-four Diagrams
+in Colours, with Descriptive Text. Foolscap 4to, cloth extra, gilt
+edges, 3rd Edition, 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Caldecott (R.)._ _See_ "Breton Folk."
+
+_Celebrated Travels and Travellers._ _See_ VERNE.
+
+_Changed Cross (The)_, and other Religious Poems. 16mo, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Child of the Cavern (The); or, Strange Doings Underground._ By JULES
+VERNE. Translated by W. H. G. KINGSTON. Numerous Illustrations. Sq. cr.
+8vo, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; cl, plain edges, 5_s._
+.
+_Child's Play_, with 16 Coloured Drawings by E. V. B. Printed on thick
+paper, with tints, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _New_. By E. V. B. Similar to the above. _See_ New.
+
+---- A New and Cheap Edition of the two above, containing 48
+Illustrations by E. V. B., printed in tint, handsomely bound, 3_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Children's Lives and How to Preserve Them; or, The Nursery Handbook._
+W. LOMAS, M.D. Crown 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
+
+_Choice Editions of Choice Books._ 2_s._ 6_d._ each, Illustrated by
+C. W. COPE, R.A., T. CRESWICK, R.A., E. DUNCAN, BIRKET FOSTER, J. C.
+HORSLEY, A.R.A., G. HICKS, R. REDGRAVE, R.A., C. STONEHOUSE, F. TAYLER,
+G. THOMAS, H. J. TOWNSHEND, E. H. WEHNERT, HARRISON WEIR, &c.
+
+ Bloomfield's Farmer's Boy.
+ Campbell's Pleasures of Hope.
+ Coleridge's Ancient Mariner.
+ Goldsmith's Deserted Village.
+ Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield.
+ Gray's Elegy in a Churchyard.
+ Keat's Eve of St. Agnes.
+ Milton's L'Allegro.
+ Poetry of Nature. Harrison Weir.
+ Rogers' (Sam.) Pleasures of Memory.
+ Shakespeare's Songs and Sonnets.
+ Tennyson's May Queen.
+ Elizabethan Poets.
+ Wordsworth's Pastoral Poems.
+
+"Such works are a glorious beatification for a poet."--_Athenæum._
+
+_Christ in Song._ Dr. PHILIP SCHAFF. A New Edition, Revised, cloth,
+gilt edges, 6_s._
+
+_Cobbett (William)._ A Biography. By EDWARD SMITH. 2 vols., crown 8vo,
+25_s._
+
+_Confessions of a Frivolous Girl (The): A Novel of Fashionable Life._
+Edited by ROBERT GRANT. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Cradle-Land of Arts and Creeds; or, Nothing New under the Sun._
+CHARLES J. STONE, Barrister-at-law, and late Advocate, High Courts,
+Bombay. 8vo, pp. 420, cloth, 14_s._
+
+_Cripps the Carrier._ 3rd Edition, 6_s._ See BLACKMORE.
+
+_Cruise of H.M.S. "Challenger" (The)._ W. J. J. SPRY, R.N. With Route
+Map and many Illustrations. 6th Edition, demy 8vo, cloth, 18_s._ Cheap
+Edition, crown 8vo, some of the Illustrations, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Curious Adventures of a Field Cricket._ Dr. ERNEST CANDÈZE. Translated
+by N. D'ANVÉRS. With numerous fine Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plain binding and edges, 5_s._
+
+
+_Dana (R. H.) Two Years before the Mast and Twenty-Four years After._
+Revised. Edition, with Notes, 12mo, 6_s._
+
+_Daughter (A) of Heth._ W. BLACK. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Day of My Life (A); or, Every Day Experiences at Eton._ By an ETON
+BOY, Author of "About Some Fellows." 16mo, cloth extra, 2_s._ 6_d._ 6th
+Thousand.
+
+_Diane._ Mrs. MACQUOID. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Dick Cheveley: his Fortunes and Misfortunes._ W. H. G. KINGSTON. 350
+pp., square 16mo, and 22 full-page Illustrations. Cloth, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_Dick Sands, the Boy Captain._ JULES VERNE. With nearly 100
+Illustrations, cloth, gilt, 10_s._ 6_d._; plain binding and plain
+edges, 5_s._
+
+_Dictionary (General) of Archæology and Antiquities._ From the French
+of E. BOSC. Crown 8vo, with nearly 200 Illustrations, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Dodge (Mrs. M.) Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates._ An entirely New
+Edition, with 59 Full-page and other Woodcuts. Square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, 5_s._; Text only, paper, 1_s._
+
+_Dogs of Assize._ A Legal Sketch-Book in Black and White. Containing 6
+Drawings by WALTER J. ALLEN. Folio, in wrapper, 6_s._ 8_d._
+
+
+_Eight Cousins_. _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_Eighteenth Century Studies._ Essays by F. HITCHMAN. Demy 8vo, 18_s._
+
+_Elementary Education in Saxony._ J. L. BASHFORD, M.A., Trin. Coll.,
+Camb. For Masters and Mistresses of Elementary Schools. Sewn, 1_s._
+
+_Elinor Dryden._ Mrs. MACQUOID. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Embroidery (Handbook of)._ L. HIGGIN. Edited by LADY MARIAN ALFORD,
+and published by authority of the Royal School of Art Needlework. With
+16 page Illustrations, Designs for Borders, &c. Crown 8vo, 5_s._
+
+_English Philosophers._ Edited by IWAN MULLER, M.A., New College,
+Oxon. A Series of Volumes containing short biographies of the most
+celebrated English Philosophers, to each of whom is assigned a separate
+volume, giving as comprehensive and detailed a statement of his views
+and contributions to Philosophy as possible, explanatory rather than
+critical, opening with a brief biographical sketch, and concluding
+with a short general summary, and a bibliographical appendix. The
+Volumes will be issued at brief intervals, in square 16mo, 3_s._ 6_d._,
+containing about 200 pp. each.
+
+The following are in the press:---
+
+=Bacon.= Professor FOWLER, Professor of Logic in Oxford.
+
+=Berkeley.= Professor T. H. GREEN, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
+Oxford.
+
+=Hamilton.= Professor MONK, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Dublin.
+[Ready.
+
+=J. S. Mill.= HELEN TAYLOR, Editor of "The Works of Buckle," &c.
+
+=Mansel.= Rev. J. H. HUCKIN, D.D., Head Master of Repton.
+
+=Adam Smith.= J. A. FARRER, M.A., Author of "Primitive Manners and
+Customs." [Ready.
+
+=Hobbes.= A. H. GOSSET, B.A., Fellow of New College, Oxford.
+
+=Bentham.= G. E. BUCKLE, M.A., Fellow of All Souls', Oxford.
+
+=Austin.= HARRY JOHNSON, B.A., late Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford.
+
+=Hartley.= E. S. BOWEN, B.A., late Scholar of New College, Oxford.
+
+=James Mill.= E. S. BOWEN [Ready.
+
+=Shaftesbury.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+=Hutcheson.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+Arrangements are in progress for volumes on LOCKE, HUME, PALEY, REID,
+&c.
+
+_Episodes of French History._ Edited, with Notes, Genealogical,
+Historical, and other Tables, by GUSTAVE MASSON, B.A.
+
+ =1. Charlemagne and the Carlovingians.=
+ =2. Louis XI. and the Crusades.=
+ =3. Francis I. and Charles V.=
+ =4. Francis I. and the Renaissance.=
+
+The above Series is based upon M. Guizot's "History of France." Each
+volume is choicely Illustrated, with Maps, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Erema; or, My Father's Sin._ _See_ BLACKMORE.
+
+_Etcher (The)._ Containing 36 Examples of the Original Etched work of
+Celebrated Artists, amongst others: BIRKET FOSTER, J. E. HODGSON, R.A.,
+COLIN HUNTER, J. P. HESELTINE, ROBERT W. MACBETH, R. S. CHATTOCK, H. R.
+ROBERTSON, &c., &c. Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 12_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Eton._ _See_ "Day of my Life," "Out of School," "About Some Fellows."
+
+_Evans (C.) Over the Hills and Far Away._ C. EVANS. One Volume, crown
+8vo, cloth extra, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _A Strange Friendship._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
+
+_Eve of Saint Agnes (The)._ JOHN KEATS. Illustrated with Nineteen
+Etchings by CHARLES O. MURRAY. Folio, cloth extra, 21_s._ An Edition
+de Luxe on large paper, containing proof impressions, has been printed,
+and specially bound, 3_l._ 3_s._
+
+
+_Farm Ballads._ WILL CARLETON. Boards, 1_s._; cloth, gilt edges, 1_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Fern Paradise (The): A Plea for the Culture of Ferns._ F. G. HEATH.
+New Edition, entirely Rewritten, Illustrated with Eighteen full-page,
+numerous other Woodcuts, including 8 Plates of Ferns and Four
+Photographs, large post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 12_s._ 6_d._ Sixth
+Edition. In 12 Parts, sewn, 1_s._ each.
+
+_Fern World (The)._ F. G. HEATH. Illustrated by Twelve Coloured Plates,
+giving complete Figures (Sixty-four in all) of every Species of British
+Fern, printed from Nature; by several full-page Engravings. Cloth,
+gilt, 6th Edition, 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+"Mr. HEATH has really given us good, well-written descriptions of
+our native Ferns, with indications of their habitats, the conditions
+under which they grow naturally, and under which they may be
+cultivated."--_Athenæum._
+
+_Few (A) Hints on Proving Wills._ Enlarged Edition, 1_s._
+
+_First Steps in Conversational French Grammar._ F. JULIEN. Being an
+Introduction to "Petites Leçons de Conversation et de Grammaire," by
+the same Author. Fcap. 8vo, 128 pp., 1_s._
+
+_Flooding of the Sahara (The)._ _See_ MACKENZIE.
+
+_Food for the People; or, Lentils and other Vegetable Cookery._ By E.
+E. ORLEBAR. Third Thousand. Small post 8vo, boards, 1_s._
+
+_Fool's Errand (A)._ ONE OF THE FOOLS. Author of "Bricks without Straw."
+Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with numerous Illustrations, 8_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Footsteps of the Master._ _See_ STOWE (Mrs. BEECHER).
+
+_Forbidden Land (A): Voyages to the Corea._ G. OPPERT. Numerous
+Illustrations and Maps. Demy 8vo, cloth extra, 21_s._
+
+_Four Lectures on Electric Induction._ Delivered at the Royal
+Institution, 1878-9. By J. E. H. GORDON, B.A. Cantab. With numerous
+Illustrations. Cloth limp, square 16mo, 3_s._
+
+_Foreign Countries and the British Colonies._ Edited by F. S. PULLING,
+M.A., Lecturer at Queen's College, Oxford, and formerly Professor at
+the Yorkshire College, Leeds. A Series of small Volumes descriptive
+of the principal Countries of the World by well-known Authors, each
+Country being treated of by a Writer who from Personal Knowledge is
+qualified to speak with authority on the Subject. The Volumes average
+180 crown 8vo pages each, contain 2 Maps and Illustrations, crown 8vo,
+3_s._ 6_d._
+
+The following is a List of the Volumes:--
+
+=Denmark and Iceland.= By E. C. OTTE, Author of "Scandinavian History,"
+&c.
+
+=Greece.= By L. SERGEANT, B.A., Knight of the Hellenic Order of the
+Saviour, Author of "New Greece."
+
+=Switzerland.= By W. A. P. COOLIDGE, M.A., Fellow of Magdalen College,
+Editor of _The Alpine Journal_.
+
+=Austria.= By D. KAY, F.R.G.S.
+
+=Russia.= By W. R. MORFILL, M.A., Oriel College, Oxford, Lecturer on
+the Ilchester Foundation, &c.
+
+=Persia.= By Major-Gen. Sir F. J. GOLDSMID, K.C.S.I., Author of
+"Telegraph and Travel," &c.
+
+=Japan.= By S. MOSSMAN, Author of "New Japan," &c.
+
+=Peru.= By CLEMENTS H. MARKHAM, M.A., C.B.
+
+=Canada.= By W. FRASER RAE, Author of "Westward by Rail," &c.
+
+=Sweden and Norway.= By the Rev. F. H. WOODS, M.A., Fellow of St.
+John's College, Oxford.
+
+=The West Indies.= By C. H. EDEN, F.R.G.S., Author of "Frozen Asia," &c.
+
+=New Zealand.=
+
+=France.= By Miss M. ROBERTS, Author of "The Atelier du Lys," "Mdlle.
+Mori," &c.
+
+=Egypt.= By S. LANE POOLE, B.A., Author of "The Life of Edward Lane,"
+&c.
+
+=Spain.= By the Rev. WENTWORTH WEBSTER, M.A., Chaplain at St. Jean de
+Luz.
+
+=Turkey-in-Asia.= By J. C. MCCOAN, M.P.
+
+=Australia.= By J. F. VESEY FITZGERALD, late Premier of New South Wales.
+
+=Holland.= By R. L. POOLE.
+
+_Franc (Maude Jeane)._ The following form one Series, small post 8vo,
+in uniform cloth bindings, with gilt edges:--
+
+ ---- _Emily's Choice._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Hall's Vineyard._ 4_s._
+ ---- _John's Wife: a Story of Life in South Australia._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Marian; or, the Light of Some One's Home._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Silken Cords and Iron Fetters._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Vermont Vale._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Minnie's Mission._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Little Mercy._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Beatrice Melton's Discipline._ 4_s._
+
+_Froissart (The Boy's)._ Selected from the Chronicles of England,
+France, Spain, &c. By SIDNEY LANIER. The Volume is fully Illustrated,
+and uniform with "The Boy's King Arthur." Crown 8vo, cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+
+_Games of patience._ _See_ CADOGAN.
+
+_Gentle Life_ (Queen Edition). 2 vols, in 1, small 4to, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES.
+
+Price 6_s._ each; or in calf extra, price 10_s._ 6_d._; Smaller
+Edition, cloth extra, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+A Reprint (with the exception of "Familiar Words" and "Other People's
+Windows") has been issued in very neat limp cloth bindings at 2_s._
+6_d._ each.
+
+_The Gentle Life._ Essays in aid of the Formation of Character of
+Gentlemen and Gentlewomen. 21st Edition.
+
+"Deserves to be printed in letters of gold, and circulated in every
+house."--_Chambers' Journal._
+
+_About in the World._ Essays by Author of "The Gentle Life."
+
+"It is not easy to open it at any page without finding some handy
+idea."--_Morning Post._
+
+_Like unto Christ._ A New Translation of Thomas à Kempis' "De
+Imitatione Christi." 2nd Edition.
+
+"Could not be presented in a more exquisite form, for a more sightly
+volume was never seen."--_Illustrated London News._
+
+_Familiar Words._ An Index Verborum, or Quotation Handbook. Affording
+an immediate Reference to Phrases and Sentences that have become
+embedded in the English language. 4th and enlarged Edition. 6_s._
+
+"The most extensive dictionary of quotation we have met with."--_Notes
+and Queries._
+
+_Essays by Montaigne._ Edited and Annotated by the Author of "The
+Gentle Life." With Portrait. 2nd Edition.
+
+"We should be glad if any words of ours could help to bespeak a large
+circulation for this handsome attractive book."--_Illustrated Times._
+
+_The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia._ Written by Sir PHILIP SIDNEY.
+Edited with Notes by Author of "The Gentle Life." 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+"All the best things are retained intact in Mr. Friswell's
+edition."--_Examiner._
+
+_The Gentle Life._ 2nd Series, 8th Edition.
+
+"There is not a single thought in the volume that does not contribute
+in some measure to the formation of a true gentleman."--_Daily News._
+
+_The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected._ the Author of "The
+Gentle Life." 3rd Edition.
+
+"All who possess 'The Gentle Life' should own this volume."--_Standard._
+
+_Half-Length Portraits._ Short Studies of Notable Persons. By J. HAIN
+FRISWELL.
+
+_Essays on English Writers_, for the Self-improvement of Students in
+English Literature.
+
+"To all who have neglected to read and study their native literature
+we would certainly suggest the volume before us as a fitting
+introduction."--_Examiner._
+
+_Other People's Windows._ J. HAIN FRISWELL. 3rd Edition.
+
+"The chapters are so lively in themselves, so mingled with shrewd views
+of human nature, so full of illustrative anecdotes, that the reader
+cannot fail to be amused."--_Morning Post._
+
+_A Man's Thoughts._ J. HAIN FRISWELL.
+
+_German Primer._ Being an Introduction to First Steps in German. By M.
+T. PREU. 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Getting On in the World; or, Hints on Success in Life._ W. MATHEWS,
+LL.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Gilpin's Forest Scenery._ Edited by F. G. HEATH. Large post 8vo, with
+numerous Illustrations. Uniform with "The Fern World," 12_s._ 6_d._ In
+6 monthly parts, 2_s._ each.
+
+_Gordon (J. E. H.)._ _See_ "Four Lectures on Electric Induction,"
+"Physical Treatise on Electricity," &c.
+
+_Gouffé. The Royal Cookery Book._ JULES GOUFFÉ; translated and adapted
+for English use by ALPHONSE GOUFFÉ, Head Pastrycook to her Majesty the
+Queen. Illustrated with large plates printed in colours. 161 Woodcuts,
+8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 2_s._
+
+---- Domestic Edition, half-bound, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+"By far the ablest and most complete work on cookery that has ever been
+submitted to the gastronomical world."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+_Great Artists._ _See_ "Biographies."
+
+_Great Historic Galleries of England (The)._ Edited by LORD RONALD
+GOWER, F.S.A., Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery. Illustrated
+by 24 large and carefully-executed _permanent_ Photographs of some of
+the most celebrated Pictures by the Great Masters. Imperial 4to, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 36_s._
+
+_Great Musicians (The)._ A Series of Biographies of the Great
+Musicians. Edited by F. HUEFFER.
+
+ =1. Wagner.= By the EDITOR.
+ =2. Weber.= By Sir JULIUS BENEDICT.
+ =3. Mendelssohn.= By JOSEPH BENNETT.
+ =4. Schubert.= By H. F. FROST.
+ =5. Rossini=, and the Modern Italian School. By H. SUTHERLAND
+ EDWARDS.
+ =6. Marcello.= By ARRIGO BOITO.
+ =7. Purcell.= By H. W. CUMMINGS.
+
+Dr. Hiller and other distinguished writers, both English and Foreign,
+have promised contributions. Each Volume is complete in itself. Small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, 3_s._
+
+_Guizot's History of France._ Translated by ROBERT BLACK. Super-royal
+8vo, very numerous Full-page and other Illustrations. In 8 vols., cloth
+extra, gilt, each 24_s._
+
+"It supplies a want which has long been felt, and ought to be in the
+hands of all students of history."--_Times._
+
+---- ---- _Masson's School Edition._ The History of France from the
+Earliest Times to the Outbreak of the Revolution; abridged from
+the Translation by Robert Black, M.A., with Chronological Index,
+Historical and Genealogical Tables, &c. By Professor GUSTAVE MASSON,
+B.A., Assistant Master at Harrow School. With 24 full-page Portraits,
+and many other Illustrations. 1 vol., demy 8vo, 600 pp., cloth extra,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Guizot's History of England._ In 3 vols. of about 500 pp. each,
+containing 60 to 70 Full-page and other Illustrations, cloth extra,
+gilt, 24_s._ each.
+
+"For luxury of typography, plainness of print, and beauty of
+illustration, these volumes, of which but one has as yet appeared
+in English, will hold their own against any production of an age so
+luxurious as our own in everything, typography not excepted."--_Times._
+
+_Guyon (Mde.) Life._ UPHAM. 6th Edition, crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+
+_Handbook to the Charities of London._ _See_ Low's.
+
+---- _of Embroidery_; _which see_.
+
+---- _to the Principal Schools of England._ _See_ Practical.
+
+_Half-Hours of Blind Man's Holiday; or, Summer and Winter Sketches in
+Black and White._ W. W. FENN, Author of "After Sundown," &c. 2 vols.,
+cr. 8vo, 24_s._
+
+_Hall (W. W.) How to Live Long; or, 1408 Health Maxims, Physical,
+Mental, and Moral._ W. W. HALL, A.M., M.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._
+Second Edition.
+
+_Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates._ _See_ DODGE.
+
+_Harper's Monthly Magazine._ Published Monthly. 160 pages, fully
+Illustrated. 1_s._ With two Serial Novels by celebrated Authors.
+
+"'Harper's Magazine' is so thickly sown with excellent illustrations
+that to count them would be a work of time; not that it is a picture
+magazine, for the engravings illustrate the text after the manner seen
+in some of our choicest _editions de luxe_."--_St. James's Gazette._
+
+"It is so pretty, so big, and so cheap.... An extraordinary
+shillingsworth--160 large octavo pages, with over a score of articles,
+and more than three times as many illustrations."--_Edinburgh Daily
+Review._
+
+"An amazing shillingsworth ... combining choice literature of both
+nations."--_Nonconformist._
+
+_Heart of Africa._ Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the
+Unexplored Regions of Central Africa, from 1868 to 1871. By Dr. GEORG
+SCHWEINFURTH. Numerous Illustrations, and large Map. 2 vols., crown
+8vo, cloth, 15_s._
+
+_Heath (Francis George)._ _See_ "Fern World," "Fern Paradise," "Our
+Woodland Trees," "Trees and Ferns," "Gilpin's Forest Scenery," "Burnham
+Beeches," "Sylvan Spring," &c.
+
+_Heber's (Bishop) Illustrated Edition of Hymns._ With upwards of 100
+beautiful Engravings. Small 4to, handsomely bound, 7_s._ 6_d._ Morocco,
+18_s._ 6_d._ and 21_s._ An entirely New Edition.
+
+_Heir of Kilfinnan (The)._ New Story by W. H. G. KINGSTON, Author of
+"Snow Shoes and Canoes," &c. With Illustrations. Cloth, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_History and Handbook of Photography._ Translated from the French of
+GASTON TISSANDIER. Edited by J. THOMSON. Imperial 16mo, over 300 pages,
+70 Woodcuts, and Specimens of Prints by the best Permanent Processes.
+Second Edition, with an Appendix by the late Mr. HENRY FOX TALBOT.
+Cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+_History of a Crime (The); Deposition of an Eye-witness._ VICTOR HUGO.
+4 vols., crown 8vo, 42_s._ Cheap Edition, 1 vol., 6_s._
+
+---- _Ancient Art._ Translated from the German of JOHN WINCKELMANN, by
+JOHN LODGE, M.D. With very numerous Plates and Illustrations. 2 vols.,
+8vo, 36_s._
+
+---- _England._ _See_ GUIZOT.
+
+---- _France._ _See_ GUIZOT.
+
+---- _Russia._ _See_ RAMBAUD.
+
+---- _Merchant Shipping._ _See_ LINDSAY.
+
+---- _United States._ _See_ BRYANT.
+
+_History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power._ With several
+hundred Illustrations. By ALFRED BARLOW. Royal 8vo, cloth extra, 1_l._
+5_s._ Second Edition.
+
+_How I Crossed Africa: from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, Through
+Unknown Countries; Discovery of the Great Zambesi Affluents, &c._--Vol.
+I., The King's Rifle. Vol. II., The Coillard Family. By Major SERPA
+PINTO. With 24 full-page and 118 half-page and smaller Illustrations,
+13 small Maps, and 1 large one. 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42_s._
+
+_How to Live Long._ _See_ HALL.
+
+_How to get Strong and how to Stay so._ WILLIAM BLAIKIE. A Manual of
+Rational, Physical, Gymnastic, and other Exercises. With Illustrations,
+small post 8vo, 5_s._
+
+_Hugo (Victor). "Ninety-Three."_ Illustrated. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+---- _Toilers of the Sea._ Crown 8vo. Illustrated, 6_s._; fancy
+boards, 2_s._; cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; On large paper with all the original
+Illustrations, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _See_ "History of a Crime."
+
+_Hundred Greatest Men (The)._ 8 portfolios, 21_s._ each, or 4 vols.,
+half morocco, gilt edges, 12 guineas, containing 15 to 20 Portraits
+each. See below.
+
+"Messrs. SAMPSON LOW & CO. are about to issue an important
+'International' work, entitled, 'THE HUNDRED GREATEST MEN;' being
+the Lives and Portraits of the 100 Greatest Men of History, divided
+into Eight Classes, each Class to form a Monthly Quarto Volume.
+The Introductions to the volumes are to be written by recognized
+authorities on the different subjects, the English contributors being
+DEAN STANLEY, Mr. MATTHEW ARNOLD, Mr. FROUDE, and Professor MAX MÜLLER;
+in Germany, Professor HELMHOLTZ; in France, MM. TAINE and RENAN; and in
+America, Mr. EMERSON. The Portraits are to be Reproductions from fine
+and rare Steel Engravings."--_Academy._
+
+_Hygiene and Public Health (A Treatise on)._ Edited by A. H. BUCK, M.D.
+Illustrated by numerous Wood Engravings. In 2 royal 8vo vols., cloth,
+one guinea each.
+
+_Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer._ _See_ BICKERSTETH.
+
+
+_Illustrated Text-Books of Art-Education._ Edited by EDWARD J. POYNTER,
+R.A. Each Volume contains numerous Illustrations, and is strongly bound
+for the use of Students, price 5_s._ The Volumes now ready are:--
+
+PAINTING.
+
+ =Classic and Italian.= By PERCY R. HEAD. With 50
+ Illustrations, 5_s._
+ =German, Flemish, and Dutch.=
+ =French and Spanish.=
+ =English and American.=
+
+ARCHITECTURE.
+
+ =Classic and Early Christian.=
+ =Gothic and Renaissance.= By T. ROGER SMITH. With 50
+ Illustrations, 5_s._
+
+SCULPTURE.
+
+ =Antique: Egyptian and Greek.=
+ =Renaissance and Modern.=
+
+ORNAMENT.
+
+ =Decoration in Colour.=
+ =Architectural Ornament.=
+
+_Illustrations of China and its People._ J. THOMPSON, F.R.G.S. Four
+Volumes, imperial 4to, each 3_l._ 3_s._
+
+_In my Indian Garden._ PHIL ROBINSON, Author of "Under the Punkah."
+With a Preface by EDWIN ARNOLD, M.A., C.S.I., &c. Crown 8vo, limp
+cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Involuntary Voyage (An)._ Showing how a Frenchman who abhorred the
+Sea was most unwillingly and by a series of accidents driven round the
+World. Numerous Illustrations. Square crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7_s._
+6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_Irish Bar._ Comprising Anecdotes, Bon-Mots, and Biographical
+Sketches of the Bench and Bar of Ireland. By J. RODERICK O'FLANAGAN,
+Barrister-at-Law. Crown 8vo, 12_s._ Second Edition.
+
+_Irish Land Question, and English Public Opinion (The)._ With a
+Supplement on Griffith's Valuation. By R. BARRY O'BRIEN, Author of "The
+Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question." Fcap. 8vo, cloth,
+2_s._
+
+_Irving (Washington)._ Complete Library Edition of his Works in 27
+Vols., Copyright, Unabridged, and with the Author's Latest Revisions,
+called the "Geoffrey Crayon" Edition, handsomely printed in large
+square 8vo, on superfine laid paper, and each volume, of about 500
+pages, will be fully Illustrated. 12_s._ 6_d._ per vol. _See also_
+"Little Britain."
+
+
+_Jack and Jill._ Miss ALCOTT. Small post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 5_s._
+With numerous Illustrations.
+
+_John Holdsworth, Chief Mate._ W. CLARKE RUSSELL, Author of "Wreck of
+the Grosvenor." Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+
+_Kingston (W. H. G.)._ _See_ "Snow-Shoes," "Child of the Cavern,"
+"Two Supercargoes," "With Axe and Rifle," "Begum's Fortune," "Heir
+of Kilfinnan," "Dick Cheveley." Each vol., with very numerous
+Illustrations, square crown 16mo, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; plainer
+binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+
+_Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart._ 6_s._ _See_ BLACK.
+
+_Lenten Meditations._ In Two Series, each complete in itself. By the
+Rev. CLAUDE BOSANQUET, Author of "Blossoms from the King's Garden."
+16mo, cloth, First Series, 1_s._ 6_d._; Second Series, 2_s._
+
+_Library of Religious Poetry._ A Collection of the Best Poems of all
+Ages and Tongues. With Biographical and Literary Notes. Edited by
+PHILIP SCHAFF, D.D., LL.D., and ARTHUR GILMAN, M.A. Royal 8vo, pp.
+1036, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21_s._
+
+_Life and Letters of the Honourable Charles Sumner (The)._ 2 vols.,
+royal 8vo, cloth. Second Edition, 36_s._
+
+_Lindsay (W. S.) History of Merchant Shipping and Ancient Commerce._
+Over 150 Illustrations, Maps, and Charts. In 4 vols., demy 8vo, cloth
+extra. Vols. 1 and 2, 21_s._; vols. 3 and 4, 24_s._ each.
+
+_Little Britain_; together with _The Spectre Bridegroom_, and _A Legend
+of Sleepy Hollow_. By WASHINGTON IRVING. An entirely New _Edition de
+luxe_, specially suitable for Presentation. Illustrated by 120 very
+fine Engravings on Wood, by Mr. J. D. COOPER. Designed by Mr. CHARLES
+O. MURRAY. Square crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Little King; or, the Taming of a Young Russian Count._ S. BLANDY. 64
+Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding,
+5_s._
+
+_Little Mercy; or, For Better for Worse._ MAUDE JEANNE FRANC, Author of
+"Marian," "Vermont Vale," &c., &c. Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 4_s._
+Second Edition.
+
+_Lost Sir Massingberd._ New Edition, crown 8vo, boards, coloured
+wrapper, 2_s._
+
+_Low's German Series_--
+
+=1. The Illustrated German Primer.= Being the easiest introduction to
+the study of German for all beginners. 1_s._
+
+=2. The Children's own German Book.= A Selection of Amusing and
+Instructive Stories in Prose. Edited by Dr. A. L. MEISSNER. Small post
+8vo, cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
+
+=3. The First German Reader, for Children from Ten to Fourteen.= Edited
+by Dr. A. L. MEISSNER. Small post 8vo, cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
+
+=4. The Second German Reader.= Edited by Dr. A. L. MEISSNER. Small post
+8vo, cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Buchheim's Deutsche Prosa. Two Volumes, sold separately_:--
+
+=5. Schiller's Prosa.= Containing Selections from the Prose Works of
+Schiller, with Notes for English Students. By Dr. BUCHHEIM. Small post
+8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+=6. Goethe's Prosa.= Selections from the Prose Works of Goethe, with
+Notes for English Students. By Dr. BUCHHEIM. Small post 8vo, 3_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Low's International Series of Toy Books._ 6_d._ each; or Mounted on
+Linen, 1_s._
+
+ =1. Little Fred and his Fiddle=, from Asbjörnsen's "Norwegian
+ Fairy Tales."
+ =2. The Lad and the North Wind=, ditto.
+ =3. The Pancake=, ditto.
+ =4. The Little Match Girl=, from H. C. Andersen's "Danish
+ Fairy Tales."
+ =5. The Emperor's New Clothes=, ditto.
+ =6. The Gallant Tin Soldier=, ditto.
+
+The above in 1 vol., cloth extra, gilt edges, with the whole 36
+Coloured Illustrations, 5_s._
+
+_Low's Standard Library of Travel and Adventure._ Crown 8vo, bound
+uniformly in cloth extra, price 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+ =1. The Great Lone Land.= By Major W. F. BUTLER, C.B.
+ =2. The Wild North Land.= By Major W. F. BUTLER, C.B.
+ =3. How I found Livingstone.= By H. M. STANLEY.
+ =4. The Threshold of the Unknown Region.= By C. R. MARKHAM.
+ (4th Edition, with Additional Chapters, 10_s._ 6_d._)
+ =5. A Whaling-Cruise to Baffin's Bay and the Gulf of
+ Boothia.= By A. H. MARKHAM.
+ =6. Campaigning on the Oxus.= By J. A. MACGAHAN.
+ =7. Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.= By MAJOR W. F.
+ BUTLER, C.B.
+ =8. Ocean to Ocean.= By the Rev. GEORGE M. GRANT. With
+ Illustrations.
+ =9. Cruise of the Challenger.= By W. J. J. SPRY, R.N.
+ =10. Schweinfurth's Heart of Africa.= 2 vols., 15_s._
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+
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+ "Comin' through the Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &c.
+ =Three Feathers.= By WILLIAM BLACK.
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+ Frontispiece by F. WALKER, A.R.A.
+ =Kilmeny.= A Novel. By W. BLACK.
+ =In Silk Attire.= By W. BLACK.
+ =Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.= By W. BLACK.
+ =History of a Crime=: The Story of the Coup d'Etat. By VICTOR
+ HUGO.
+ =Alice Lorraine.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Lorna Doone.= By R. D. BLACKMORE. 8th Edition.
+ =Cradock Nowell.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Clara Vaughan.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Cripps the Carrier.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Erema; or, My Father's Sin.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
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+ =Innocent.= By Mrs. OLIPHANT. Eight Illustrations.
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+ Illustrations. _See also_ Rose Library.
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+ =Ninety-Three.= By VICTOR HUGO. Numerous Illustrations.
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+
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+
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+with Maps and Illustrations, cloth extra, 8_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
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+
+_O'Brien._ _See_ "Parliamentary History" and "Irish Land Question."
+
+_Old-Fashioned Girl._ _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_On Horseback through Asia Minor._ Capt. FRED BURNABY, Royal Horse
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+
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+Edition--the 3rd, with Illustrations, 5_s._
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+
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+
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+
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+_Practical (A) Handbook to the Principal Schools of England._ By C. E.
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+Translated by E. DELMAR MORGAN, F.R.G.S. Demy 8vo, with a Map. 16_s._
+
+_Primitive Folk Moots; or, Open-Air Assemblies in Britain._ By GEORGE
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+BOOKS BY JULES VERNE.
+
+------------------------+--------------------++---------------------------
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+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+ [A] How Mr. Garrett executed his mission and killed the Kid is
+ narrated in the account of the desperados of the West, which
+ forms a separate chapter.
+
+ [B] The day of our departure from the United States, after the
+ visit of which I have been giving the details, was the date
+ of a great crime, of which we were then ignorant. About the
+ very time that we were on our way to the wharf to embark on
+ board the "_City of Berlin_," the murderer of the President
+ was accomplishing his purpose. But with all the means and
+ appliances which exist for the despatch of news, I believe
+ that the commission of the crime was not known till the
+ steamer had passed out to sea from the Sand Heads.
+
+ [C] _See also_ Rose Library.
+
+
+
+
+London:
+
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+
+CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol.
+II (of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44333 ***
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+<div>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44333 ***</div>
+
+<div class="tnbox">
+<p class="center"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b></p>
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original
+document have been preserved.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#Fritz">page 26</a> Count Fritz Thumb should possibly be Count FritzThumb.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#Indianopolis">page 120</a>, Indianopolis should possibly be Indianapolis.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#How">page 124</a>, General How should possibly be General Howe.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1>
+HESPEROTHEN;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="s08">NOTES FROM THE WEST:</span><br />
+<br />
+
+<span class="s04">A RECORD OF A</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="s05">RAMBLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA</span><br />
+<span class="s05">IN THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1881.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="center p4"><span class="s08">BY</span><br />
+
+W. H. RUSSELL, LL.D.<br />
+
+<span class="s05">BARRISTER-AT-LAW.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center p2"><i>IN TWO VOLUMES.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Vol. II.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center p4">LONDON:<br />
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON,<br />
+<span class="s08">CROWN BUILDINGS, 188 FLEET STREET.</span><br />
+1882.</p>
+
+<p class="center s05">[<i>All rights reserved.</i>]</p>
+
+<p class="center p6 s08">
+LONDON:<br />
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,<br />
+STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">iii</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h2>
+<hr class="l05" />
+<table summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER I.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">ARIZONA.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Deming&mdash;The Mirage&mdash;Ruined Cities&mdash;American Explorers&mdash;Self-Tormentors&mdash;Animals
+and Plants&mdash;Yuma&mdash;California&mdash;Los
+Angeles&mdash;Santa Monica&mdash;The Pacific</td>
+<td class="tdr">Page <a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER II.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">A new Land of Goshen&mdash;A Jehu indeed&mdash;The Drive to Clarke's&mdash;A
+Mountain Hostelry&mdash;Grizzlies&mdash;Fascination Point&mdash;The
+Merced&mdash;Yosemite Fall&mdash;A Salute&mdash;Mountain Airs&mdash;The Mirror
+Lake&mdash;"See that Rattle?"&mdash;A Philosophic Barber</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER III.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">SAN FRANCISCO.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">The Palace Hotel&mdash;General McDowell&mdash;Palo-Alto&mdash;The "Hoodlums"&mdash;The
+real Sir Roger&mdash;Exiles in the Far West&mdash;The
+Chinese Population&mdash;For and Against them&mdash;The Sand Lot&mdash;Fast
+Trotters&mdash;The Sea-Lions&mdash;The Diamond Palace&mdash;The
+Coloured Population&mdash;"Eastward Ho!"</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER IV.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Los Angeles&mdash;Mud-geysers&mdash;"Billy the Kid"&mdash;General Fremont&mdash;Manitou,
+the Garden of the Gods&mdash;Desperadoes&mdash;Bob Ingersoll&mdash;Denver
+City&mdash;Leadville&mdash;Grand Cañon</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_73">73</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">iv</a></span></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER V.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Liquor Law&mdash;Kansas Academy of Science&mdash;An Incident of Travel&mdash;A
+Parting Symposium&mdash;Life in the Cars&mdash;St. Louis to New
+York</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER VI.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">NEW YORK&mdash;NEWPORT&mdash;DEPARTURE.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Coney Island&mdash;Newport&mdash;Bass-fishing&mdash;Habit of Spitting&mdash;Brighton
+Beach&mdash;Newport Coaching&mdash;Extra Ecclesiam&mdash;Victories
+of American Horses&mdash;Newport Avenues&mdash;Return to
+New York&mdash;Our Last Day in America</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER VII.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">RETURN TO EUROPE.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">The "<i>City of Berlin</i>"&mdash;The Inman Line&mdash;The Service at Roche's
+Point&mdash;Queenstown Discomforts&mdash;A sorry Welcome Home</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER VIII.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Education&mdash;Free Schools&mdash;Influence of Money in Politics&mdash;Corruption
+in Public Life&mdash;Crime on the Western Borders&mdash;The
+Great Rebellion&mdash;Anniversaries&mdash;Great Courtesy to Strangers&mdash;Manners
+and Customs</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER IX.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Captain Pratt&mdash;Carlisle Barracks&mdash;An Indian Bowman&mdash;The
+Indian Question&mdash;The Pupils' Gossip&mdash;The "School News"&mdash;Indian
+Visitors&mdash;The White Mother&mdash;The India Office&mdash;White
+and Red&mdash;Quo Quousque?&mdash;Indian Title Deeds&mdash;The Reservations&mdash;The
+Indian Agencies&mdash;Missionary Efforts&mdash;The Red
+Man and the Maori</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center b20 p6">HESPEROTHEN.</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
+
+ARIZONA.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Deming&mdash;The Mirage&mdash;Ruined Cities&mdash;American Explorers&mdash;Self-Tormentors&mdash;Animals
+and Plants&mdash;Yuma&mdash;California&mdash;Los
+Angeles&mdash;Santa Monica&mdash;The Pacific.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>May 30th.</i>&mdash;At an hour as to which controversy
+might arise, owing to the changes of time to which we
+have been subjected, the train, which had pulled up but
+seldom during the night, stopped at Deming Junction,
+where the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad
+"connects" with the Southern Pacific, on which our
+cars were to be "hauled" to San Francisco. Jefferson
+time and San Francisco time differ two hours, so at one
+end of the station we scored 6 <span class="s08">A.M.</span>, and at the other
+8 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> The sooner one gets away from Deming in any
+direction the better. A year ago&mdash;as is usually the
+case hereabouts&mdash;there was not a trace of a town on
+the dry ugly plain covered with prickly acacias and
+"Spanish bayonets"; now Deming flourishes in gaming
+and drinking saloons, express offices, and all the horrors
+of "enterprise" in the West. The look-out revealed
+a few tents, wooden shanties, a station, at which workmen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span>
+were running up a frame-house, ground littered
+with preserved provision tins, broken crockery, adobes
+and refuse of all sorts. At the door of one hut,
+swarming with flies, swung half a carcase of beef; two
+women were washing, pale-faced, but not uncheerful
+creatures, who had not a good opinion of Deming and
+its population. "They carry out a dead man a day, or
+used to," said one informant. The lady washerwomen
+did not quite corroborate the figure; but, remarked the
+chattier of the two, "there was a considerable shewtin'
+about last night!" To the observation of one of the
+party that he was "going to have a look about," the
+other lady made reply, "I guess if you dew it will be
+'hands up' for ten cents with you." On the platform
+was a United States marshal, with a revolver stuck in
+his belt, but his duties were considered to be punitive
+rather than preventive. Here Mr. Chase and Mr.
+Hawley left us to return to Topeka. At the abschiednehmen
+Sir H. Green was affected by a proof of
+interest in his welfare of a touching character and
+very full of local colour; one of our friends beckoned
+to him, took him aside, and pulling out a revolver
+("It is hands up!" thought Sir Henry), fully loaded,
+pressed it on his acceptance in the kindest manner as a
+useful <i>compagnon de voyage</i>. As we were not to stay
+at Deming, the self-sacrifice was not consummated.</p>
+
+<p>The regular train having come up, our special was
+tacked on to it, and in an hour the locomotive puffed
+out of the depot, and sped westerly on its way at the
+rate of twenty miles an hour, across a plain some
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>
+fifteen miles broad, bordered by jagged, irregular
+mountain ranges north and south, as dry as a bone&mdash;so
+dry that water for the engine has to be brought
+to the stations in tanks. A scanty growth of what
+looked like camel grass, interspersed euphorbias and
+cactuses of great height, was all that met the eye.
+We are approaching the great basin of Arizona, and
+are warned that much dust and great heat must be
+expected, and that the "scenery" does not improve in
+point of variety or verdure, both of which are nearly at
+zero. A vigorous, well-directed campaign against the
+flies in the saloon gave us comparative repose; then the
+blinds being pulled down, and the thermometer reduced
+to 83 deg., society settled itself to study, with results
+indicated presently by a gentle <i>susurrus</i> on the sofas.
+A sudden alarm, "Look at the deer!" There sure
+enough was a herd of antelopes flying over the scrub
+towards the horizon, which flickered about in the heat
+in a mirage of islands and uplifted mountain ends&mdash;so
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p>After passing Lordsburgh, a desolate spot in the
+desert, there appeared a beautiful mirage. The sand
+became a sheet of water, waveless and mirror-like, and
+in it we saw reflected in trenchant outline the mountain
+range beyond. "It must be water! it is water!"
+exclaimed an unbelieving director. And, lo! as he
+spoke the "dust devils" rose and danced along the
+face of the sea; in another minute the vision was gone;
+the dazzling sand, white, blank and dull, mocked our
+senses. This was near Stein's Pass, up which the train
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>
+of nine carriages was climbing&mdash;"the heaviest train
+that has gone over yet," said the triumphant conductor.
+"But we thought we'd try it." Each waggon weighed
+30 tons. The Pass is three miles long, and we were
+working at a grade of 74 feet with a 19-inch cylinder
+engine.</p>
+
+<p>Between Pyramid Station and San Simon (<i>stant
+nomina umbrarum</i>&mdash;the names of mere shadows of
+stations) the western border of New Mexico is crossed,
+and we enter the great Territory of Arizona, which lies
+between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.</p>
+
+<p>It is bounded by New Mexico on the east, by Mexico
+on the south, by Utah and Nevada on the north and
+north-west, and by California in continuation of the
+western boundary. It is as large as New York,
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware
+together. Whom it belonged to first, so far as occupation
+constitutes possession, I know not; but the
+Spaniards owned and neglected it for more than three
+centuries before the Americans possessed it. In 1848
+and 1853 the regions now forming Arizona, New
+Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Nevada were ceded by
+the descendants of the Spanish conquerors to the
+conquering Anglo-American. It would need weeks of
+assiduous travel to explore the portion of Arizona
+where the most interesting ruins in America, the
+cities of the Zoltecs or the Aztecs&mdash;for the experts
+differ respecting their origin&mdash;are to be found. The
+weight of authority and of recent investigation leads
+one to believe that the Aztecs were not the builders
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
+of these ruined cities. Humboldt, indeed, believed
+that they were; but, as Mr. Hinton remarks, in
+his capital little handbook, which I recommend to
+prospectors, emigrants, tourists, and travellers, "to
+suppose such an utter abandonment of settled habitations,
+it will be necessary to suppose some strange
+impelling reasons, either in climate or other causes,
+that must have amounted to a catastrophe. An
+hypothesis which would leave a whole race able to
+conquer an empire, and to preserve power enough to
+abandon without destruction their old homes, implies
+conditions and forces without a known historical
+parallel." The conclusion that many native cities were
+flourishing when the Spaniards arrived in America
+may, perhaps, be questioned. There is a distinctive
+character about them, differing from that of the
+Mississippi mounds, the Central American pyramids, or
+the ruined cities of Yucatan.</p>
+
+<p>The site of one of these cities was pointed out to us
+from the train, and that was all we saw of them.
+But I heard so much about the mysterious remains
+that I was induced to procure Mr. Bancroft's remarkable
+essay on the native races of the Pacific
+Coast. Mr. Bancroft believes that the Pueblos and
+other Indians, in a state of civilisation which they
+subsequently lost, were the earliest inhabitants of these
+countries and the builders of the cities; that the
+Apaches came down upon them, and their work being
+then aided by the Spaniards, this original agricultural
+people were swept off the face of the earth. But
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>
+where the Apaches came from the American ethnologists
+have not, I believe, determined. For hundreds
+of miles these ruins cover the country&mdash;stone houses,
+ancient watch-towers, and adobe buildings, around
+which are quantities of stone implements, masses of
+crockery and pottery. In some places there are structures
+of wood and stone, without iron, the masonry
+consisting of thin plates of sandstone dressed on the
+edges, and laid in coarse mortar nearly as hard as
+the stone itself.</p>
+
+<p>The explorers who have discovered the most interesting
+cities in Arizona and elsewhere were officers
+of the United States army. They have been the true
+pioneers of American civilisation in the West, and
+it is most creditable to them that they have been
+able to furnish so much scientific and antiquarian
+observation in the execution of their arduous and often
+painful duty in Indian warfare. There is no cold
+shade cast upon the labours of officers who desire to
+make a little reputation for themselves by contributions
+to scientific publications, and by papers on natural
+history and the like in periodical publications or in
+the daily press.</p>
+
+<p>There is, as might be expected from its position,
+a very high temperature in Arizona. This lasts
+from the middle of June to the first of October.
+During the best part of summer exertion of any kind
+is impossible. Metal objects cannot be handled without
+producing blisters; rain scarcely ever falls; and,
+to keep up the drain of constant evaporation, a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
+man must drink a gallon or two gallons of water a
+day. Mr. Ross Brown, speaking of the summer, declares
+that "everything dries. Waggons dry; men
+dry; chickens dry. There is no juice left in anything,
+living or dead, by the close of summer. Officers
+and soldiers creak as they walk; chickens hatched at
+the season come out of the shell ready cooked. Bacon
+is eaten with a spoon, and butter must stand in the
+sun an hour before the flies become dry enough for use.
+The Indians sit in the river with fresh mud on their
+heads, and, by dint of constant dipping and sprinkling,
+manage to keep from roasting, though they usually
+come out parboiled." But, although it is recorded
+that a party encamped on a narrow cañon where
+the temperature was 120 degrees, there was no sunstroke.
+And in that respect the climate differs from
+that on the eastern coast, where, especially this very
+summer, a great number of deaths were caused by
+<i>coup de soleil</i>. People, with the thermometer marking
+94 degrees, talk of its being agreeably cold. An exceedingly
+interesting fact, if it be one, connected
+with residence in this part of the world is the wholesome
+effect of complete abstinence. Death from want
+of water was by no means infrequent in the old days
+before so many wells were dug; but it only occurs
+when there is a good deal of humidity in the air.
+Although alcoholic drinks and tobacco have an injurious
+effect, there is a large consumption of both at
+all the stations and at the mines.</p>
+
+<p>As in the Orange River Free State, where probably
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
+the conditions of temperature are not very dissimilar,
+pulmonary complaints are cured, so a residence in
+Arizona, it is said, stops consumption; and there
+are authentic statements that people who arrived in
+a rapid decline have experienced almost immediate
+relief of the principal symptoms, and have been finally
+cured. Governor Safford, in an official letter, states
+that his lungs were a good deal diseased, and that he
+was suffering with a severe cough when he reached
+Arizona, and that in six months his cough left him.
+He is satisfied the warm, dry atmosphere acted like a
+healing balm to diseased lungs, and that, the pores
+being kept open, the impurities which attack weak
+organs escape through the skin. Dr. Loryea, of San
+Francisco, and Dr. Sawyer aver that Arizona is
+nature's Turkish bath, and that Yuma, that evil-looking
+place, contains the fountains of health.</p>
+
+<p>Of such vast regions a small acquaintance acquired
+by passing rapidly twice over a line of railway does
+not entitle one to speak; but, if what we read and
+heard of Arizona be true, there is within its limits
+enormous mineral and agricultural wealth. There
+are carboniferous basins of great extent and richness.
+The mountains teem with ore. Silver and gold, copper
+pyrites, zinc, and lead are to be found over a great
+range, the extent of which is as yet imperfectly
+known. There are sulphates of nearly all the metals;
+metallic oxides, chlorides, carbonates, nitrates; agates,
+amethysts, garnets, and other precious stones. People
+there are who believe that the diamond, the emerald,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span>
+and the ruby will turn up in due time. In fact, if one
+were to be guided by the accounts in the papers or the
+guide-books, he would think that a sure way of making
+an immediate fortune would be to settle down on any
+hillside in this favourite land. Nevertheless, what
+I saw out of my window gave me reason to suppose
+that there was poverty in Arizona as well as in the old
+country. Nor did the buildings which I saw by the
+way at the sparse stations and infrequent towns give
+an idea that the in-dwellers were well-to-do in the
+world. The adobe, or burnt brick, which is a common
+material in lieu of better, has always a ruinous appearance.
+The houses built of it yesterday seem tumbling
+to pieces from the influences of old age.</p>
+
+<p>We take no note of time save by its relation
+to constant motion, and to the "programme"&mdash;a
+Procrustean bed on which we have voluntarily
+placed our tortured limbs. Sometimes in the hours
+of the night, which could not be called still because
+of the incessant pealing, rattling, and thundering of
+the train, I thought of the wonderful ways of man
+with himself in such affairs as we were now engaged
+in. There is a play of Terence which was
+a trouble to me in my youth, so long ago that I
+remember very little more of it than the dismal and
+elongated name; but Mr. "Heautontimorumenos"
+never needlessly bound himself up in a programme and
+delivered his life over to a time-table! It is likely
+enough, seeing what sort of man he was, that he would
+have adopted that course had he lived in these days.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
+I admit that programmes are necessary when your
+movements regulate, or have to be regulated by, those
+of other people; and that was the case in some measure
+with us, but the solicitude it occasioned the worthy
+and valued friends, whose brows I perceived becoming
+more puckered, and whose faces and spirits were heavy
+with cares connected with the programme, to come up
+to time, was beyond belief, and I vowed if ever I had my
+own way with the ordering of a party I would have no
+programme at all. And plot and calculate as you will,
+a gale of wind, or a heated axle, or a broken bridge, or
+a flood, upsets everything, and your schemes gang aglee
+utterly! It was admirable to see how we were working
+out the destiny we had made manifest for ourselves
+in advance so long ago, but the task was not
+easy. What curious sounds, by the way, our train
+made at night! One could now and then compose
+words to the tune of the wheels, and the regular rhythm
+forced one at times to hum the words of a song, of which
+the train seemed to hammer out the music. It seemed
+so strange to be turning into bed night after night,
+and waking up to pass the same life day after day,
+like a log of wood carried on by an interminable,
+irresistible torrent.</p>
+
+<p>Provided with books and newspapers, and friends to
+converse with, as well as with sights to see, we had,
+however, no reason to complain that time hung heavy
+on our hands as the train sped on. The books were very
+utilitarian, it is true&mdash;Reports of Chambers of Commerce,
+statistics and papers connected with railway and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
+commercial enterprise and the like. But our directors
+took to that literature with avidity, and aided by maps
+and tables, copiously furnished to them, seemed bent
+on passing with honours in a competitive examination
+anent the American railway system. There were
+always, close at hand in the cars, competent authorities
+to answer questions, or able champions to engage in
+controversy, and as I heard all the subtle contentions,
+which I did not understand, concerning signalling and
+baggage checking, gauges and engines, curves and
+gradients, freights and fares, I was set to think what
+the field had been in which all the ingenuity and talent
+displayed in dealing with such topics were exercised
+in pre-railway days. These discussions were mostly
+connected with the consideration of profits and percentages,
+and that was a neutral ground on which the
+combatants man&oelig;uvred their facts and figures as in a
+natural "<i>schauplatz</i>". There were times when such
+investigations ran down like a clock, and no one wound
+them up again for a few hours, and then my friends
+digested the remains they found on the field of battle
+and strengthened themselves for friendly jousting.</p>
+
+<p>Not very long ago there would have been exceedingly
+good sporting in many parts of Arizona.
+Grizzly bears, common and black bears; pumas, mountain
+sheep, jaguars, ocelots, opossums, panthers, wolves,
+and lynxes are largely distributed over the hill ranges.
+There are also hares and rabbits and many smaller
+animals. Wild turkeys have much diminished of late
+years; but there is a variety of birds, some of them
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
+excellent for the spit. The chase, however, is attended
+with some danger, unless one is very well booted and
+looks out where he treads, as rattle-snakes abound, and
+are of exceeding virulence, the black species being
+especially deadly. There are horned toads, but these
+are harmless.</p>
+
+<p>For the botanist Arizona is an almost inexhaustible
+field of delight. Any one who likes to read of vegetable
+wonders, or of an extraordinarily varied flora,
+cannot do better than get Dr. Loryea's work, or read
+'New Mexico,' by Elias Brevoort. The growth which
+struck us most was that of the extraordinary cactus
+called the candelabra or Sahuaro. It is worth while
+going so far as the railway will take one to see these
+plants sticking up on the sides of a rock without a
+trace of verdure or moisture, rising to the height of
+40 or 50 feet, and throwing out enormous arms at the
+most grotesque angles, each varying from the other in
+shape, the number of its arms, and in the manner in
+which they are disposed. This giant cactus is covered
+with prickles, and is of a light green colour. It is
+said that in the old days the Apache Indians not unfrequently
+made use of them as handy means of torture,
+and nailed their victims to a cactus previous to setting
+fire to it. The body of the plant is resinous, and it
+can be easily converted into a bonfire. Here and
+there we saw some with traces of pale yellow flowers.
+When these are gone there is a fruit, which makes an
+excellent preserve, or can be boiled into sugar. Then
+there are prickly pears in great quantities; and there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>
+is a "negro-head cactus," with a round top covered
+with sharp spines, which furnished the Mexicans with
+fish-hooks. "There is a soul of beauty in things
+evil." If a thirsty traveller coming upon one of these
+plants kindles a fire around it, the juices of its body
+are gradually concentrated into a central cavity, where
+they only wait incision to be liberated in the form of
+a pleasant drink, half a gallon or more in quantity.
+The appliances for getting a drink out of most of
+these roots are described at length in various books
+of travel; but however useful they may have been at
+the time, the activity of the Atchison, Topeka and
+Santa Fé Railway will in all probability exempt
+travellers in future from any necessity to avail themselves
+of these ingenious devices. Trees flourish in
+spite of the heat and want of water. As various as
+the trees are the human inhabitants, and one of
+the greatest marvels connected with them, perhaps,
+is the extraordinary variety of dialects amongst people
+of the same race, who lived in the same country
+long before the white man came to trouble them.
+They are decreasing, of course, in numbers; but in
+some of the reservations they seem to have arrested
+downward progress, and to have taken to some
+form of agricultural labour. At present Arizona is
+the happy hunting-ground of the unfortunate red
+man. There is, I am assured, no disposition on the
+part of the whites to intrude upon the reservations of
+the various tribes. I did not hear of any one who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
+had come in from the East to settle with the view of
+making his fortune by farming; but miners have
+flooded the cañons, and climbed the mountain-tops;
+and now they have settled down into a steady way of
+life without any big "booms," as the Americans say, but
+with prospects of pretty certain returns for their labour.</p>
+
+<p>All night we travelled on, and when the morning
+came, we were still traversing the desert, still passing
+through one of the most sterile wastes on the face of
+the earth, where, however, by strange contrasts of
+nature&mdash;or is it strange?&mdash;there were in the mountains
+and in the ravines rich ores to tempt the cupidity
+and enterprize of man. We are continually reminded
+of similar wastes in India and in Africa; but no one,
+as far as I know, has yet discovered any mineral
+wealth in the north-western deserts of our Indian
+Empire. And although Captain Burton and others
+have fancied they have come across an El Dorado in
+Southern Egypt, and Ibrahim Pasha had such faith
+in the existence of gold in those regions that he led
+forth an expedition to perish there, there is no such
+fortune in store for the adventurous miner as awaits
+him in Arizona, Colorado, and California.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 1st.</i>&mdash;Everyone who has entered Arizona, or
+left it&mdash;and let us hope he went back all the better
+for his visit&mdash;will recollect Yuma for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma is on the Colorado, which divides California
+from Arizona. The muddy waters of the river rush
+with immense velocity past the buttresses of the fine
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
+bridge, with a draw for steamers, that spans it. The
+town consists apparently of adobe houses, and these not
+very regularly built. I could not visit the main street
+for lack of time, but the offshoots within eyeshot of us
+were not tempting. All we could see from the railway
+windows were flat-roofed adobe houses, some squalid
+Indians nearly naked, the buildings, with the Stars and
+Stripes over them, of the United States post on the left
+bank, and a few wooden sheds. It is said to be one of
+the hottest places in the world, and certainly looked
+dry and dusty. They say that a soldier who died there
+and went to an unmentionable place, returned in the
+spirit to beg for a blanket, as he felt so cold!</p>
+
+<p>More happily constituted travellers than most of
+us have seen something pleasing in the aspect of the
+country roundabout, and have been moved to much admiration
+by the various tints of the hills in the distance,
+and by the rocks which constitute the near limits of
+the valley through which the river passes. In the old
+days, when the stage-coaches offered the only means of
+travelling through the district, there might have been
+a good deal to see along the road; but the rail generally
+avoids sights, and where nature is at its best, the
+engineer strikes deep down and burrows if he can.
+The colours of the hills are bright and varied; the
+lava rocks are of many shades, and the sun, piercing
+through strata of pure air, illuminates them with
+great vividness and force; but after a time the eye
+tires of the uniform hues of the landscape. For a few
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
+miles the rail runs close to the river, then plunges
+into the most remorseless, cruel waste of sand and
+rock, spread out up to the foot of the rugged hills of
+the Barnardino Range, I ever beheld&mdash;an abomination
+of desolation compared with which the Libyan Desert
+or the plains of Scinde were the Garden of the Hesperides.
+I cannot describe, nor could I at any time hope
+to succeed in giving an adequate conception of this
+dreadful wilderness. For 107 miles west there is not
+a drop of water to be found; the stations are dependent
+on the railway for their supplies. But
+Nature, as if to take away the reproach of permitting
+such a vast blotch on her fair face, kindly threw in
+Fata Morgana. We saw with delight widespread
+lakes with fairy islands in the midst; placid seas
+washing the base of the distant hills. This baked and
+dreary expanse extends nearly to San Gorgonio. We
+were spared the sandstorms which are so dreadful,
+nor did we experience inconvenience from the dust.
+The traveller, who has begun to despair of ever
+seeing anything greener than giant cacti and the
+adamantine vegetation which dispenses with water,
+is agreeably surprised as he approaches Los Angeles.
+If he be as fortunate as we were in having such friends
+as Colonel Baker and his wife to take charge of him,
+he will be amply repaid for far greater discomforts
+than any he experienced in the Colorado desert. From
+Los Angeles there is a railway to Santa Monica, seventeen
+miles distant, which belongs to Colonel Baker;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>
+and I would advise every one who can, either to spare
+or make the time for a diversion to that most delightful
+spot. Judge of the pleasure we felt when, after a
+picturesque run through orange groves, vineyards, and
+fields of corn and barley, we gazed on the waters of
+the Pacific&mdash;"θαλαττα!
+θαλαττα!" What a glorious
+scene! the broad bay lighted by the rays of the declining
+sun; the blue waves rolling on in solemn
+march, and breaking in long lines of foam on the
+dazzling sand, and nearer still the gardens and trees
+of the Pacific Biarritz which was about to welcome
+us! Our palace-car and its attendant carriages shot
+into a siding close to the beach. In a few minutes
+"every man Jack" was off to the bathing establishment
+to conform to the regulations ere we plunged
+into the sea. It is an orthodox bathing-place of the
+highest order. The Baths are extensive, and provided
+with every convenience and comfort for ladies and invalids;
+hot and cold, salt water and fresh, for those
+who do not like to trust themselves to the sea. A rope
+extended seaward to hold on by was needful, for the
+surf was heavy and the undertow strong. The water
+was delicious. Generally there is less sea on, and it
+is never too hot or too cold for bathing. Next morning
+we had another bath in a still rougher Pacific. The
+Duke and some of the party were driven about the
+country by Colonel and Mrs. Baker, and at 3 <span class="s08">P.M.</span>, to
+our sorrow, we left the most lovable little spot of all
+we have seen on this continent. Good fortune be in
+store for Santa Monica! At Los Angeles, where carriages
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
+were waiting, we drove through the streets and
+suburbs, which enabled us to appreciate the reasons
+which induced the Spanish founders to give the city its
+name. In the evening we continued our journey,
+passing in the dark over the feat of engineering called
+the Loop.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
+THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+A new Land of Goshen&mdash;A Jehu indeed&mdash;The Drive to Clarke's&mdash;A
+Mountain Hostelry&mdash;Grizzlies&mdash;Fascination Point&mdash;The
+Merced&mdash;Yosemite Fall&mdash;A Salute&mdash;Mountain Airs&mdash;The Mirror
+Lake&mdash;"See that Rattle?"&mdash;A Philosophic Barber.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>June 2nd.</i>&mdash;It is astonishing how soon one gets
+accustomed to the rattle and rumble of the rail, and
+sleeps all the night through after a time, waking up
+only when a train stops at a station, just as a miller is
+roused by the cessation of the clock of the mill-wheel.
+We keep good hours, and so at 4.30 this morning I
+was looking out of the window at a sea of blue mountain
+ridges upon the west, which looked like the waves of
+the ocean, so varied in the serrated edges was the line
+of stony waves which seemed as if they were about to
+sweep down over the great stretch of prairie. We
+were passing through a new land of Goshen, at least
+that was the name which I detected on the station
+board, indicating a junction with another line, and early
+as was the hour the door of the hospitable restaurant
+was open, and gentlemen in front were to be seen
+drawing their hands across their lips as if they had
+been taking a refresher in the early morning. Close
+at hand the country was perfectly flat, covered with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
+glorious crops nearly ripe for the sickle, and indeed
+cut and stacked in some places. Water appeared
+abundant; a river flowing west was visible at intervals,
+its course marked by a line of trees. Large black
+cranes stalked about in the meadow-like fields, and
+hares sat up on end to take a look at the train. The
+paucity of human beings, except at the rare stations,
+was remarkable; only when I say "rare," perhaps I am
+scarcely justified, as there were little wooden huts at
+intervals perhaps of ten or twelve miles, where a saloon
+announced itself, and a possible ticket-office.</p>
+
+<p>On the east of the plain through which the line runs,
+the peaks of the Sierra Nevada were visible, but the
+journey was rather monotonous all the same, and we
+were glad when our train halted at Madera, about
+ninety miles from Goshen, where we were to get out
+and start on our expedition to the Yosemite Valley.
+Especial arrangements had been made for our conveyance,
+but I almost doubt now whether it would not
+have been better for us to have taken the ordinary
+carriage which leaves Madera every day, except Monday,
+for the Yosemite Valley, at 7.45, arriving at Clarke's
+or Bruce's in somewhat less than twelve hours, so as
+to bring daylight with it to the halting-place; a very
+desirable thing, as we soon found out. It was 8
+o'clock before our party started from Madera, in two
+Kendal carriages with four horses each. In one was
+the Duke, Lady Green, Mr. Stephen, and myself, with
+Crockett on the box; in another were Sir Henry
+Green, Mr. Wright, Major Anderson, and Mr. Jerome.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
+Our driver was a man with the impossible name of
+MacLenathan, a resolute, dry, taciturn man, with a
+good face, seamed with the exposure to sun and rain of
+many years on the box. But he told us he had deserted
+it lately, and had taken to the work of livery stable
+keeper, only coming out on this occasion as driver to
+do honour to the Duke. As it turned out, it was well
+his right and his left hand had not lost their cunning.
+The driver of the other carriage was a noted character,
+rejoicing in the name of "Buffalo Bill," and later on
+we had reason to feel very thankful to him also for the
+possession of great pluck and nerve. For some ten or
+twelve miles the route, which consists of mere wheel
+tracks over the prairie, runs over moderately undulating
+land. On the right there is a shoot or <i>flume</i> for
+carrying down timber from the upper part of the
+mountain ridge fifty miles away. The dust was
+troublesome, and the rapid motion of the four horses
+scarcely saved us from the roasting sun. The scenery
+was not interesting; indeed, the great object of
+attraction was the little Californian quail with his
+pretty crest, running across through the grass or
+jumping up upon a stump to have a look at the
+travellers. Stage stables were far apart, but the
+speed was fair, and it was astonishing to see the
+excellent condition in which the horses were at
+the end of their long canter, and what capital steeds
+were taken out of the stalls, in which they were
+feeding on barley-straw, to be put into the traces.
+I think the average length of the stages was about
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>
+twelve miles. We lost about an hour at a little
+mining village where we halted for dinner, a place
+called Coarse Gold, as well as I recollect, consisting
+of the usual buildings, a few shanties, the store, the
+hotel, far better than might have been expected, and
+a sort of wigwam or one-storeyed house, in front of
+which were assembled a number of "Digger Indians,"
+degraded specimens of a degraded tribe. They sat
+looking at the new arrivals in the most apathetic
+manner, just as they might regard so many flies.
+The men were dressed in a compromise of old Indian
+attire, leather leggings and deerskin jackets, with
+European clothing, caps, bad hats and trousers, and
+old boots, the women swathed ungracefully in what
+seemed to be pieces of blanket, their legs encased in
+folds of dirty cotton. One of these Diggers was
+very slightly dressed, and as it is intensely cold in
+the winter, we asked him whether he did not feel
+the effect of the frost and snow. He knew a little
+English, and made the most of it. "When your body
+is covered you do not feel the cold," he said; "But
+your face is always uncovered, and yet you do not feel
+the cold there. An Indian's body is all face." And
+that was all the explanation he would vouchsafe
+to us. Somehow or another, what with delays at the
+stations, possibly caused by our being out of the
+regular running, and being an interpolation on the
+ordinary course of travel, and possibly owing to our
+reduced speed, for the carriages with four horses
+did not, it seems, go as fast as the public conveyance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
+with six, it was getting dark as we approached
+the line of wooded hills, in a valley in which, many
+miles away, lay our halting-place for the night. The
+result of our delay in starting, concerning which
+the driver had been severe from time to time, was
+startlingly manifest as the coaches mounted the
+steep ascents of one of the most tortuous roads in
+the world. The spurs of the hills come down very
+sharply to the valley, and the road is carried round by a
+series of very severe gradients following the contour
+of the mountain-chain, so that at one time there is a
+deep gorge on your left, and then, as the road leaves
+that spur with the valley on that side and crosses to
+another spur, there is a great descent on the right, so
+that you are continually passing along by a series of
+precipices, to which, in our case, the fast gathering
+gloom imparted additional horror. Through the
+sighing of the wind in the trees aloft came the roar
+of the torrents down below. The drivers went along
+at a good steady canter, and from time to time, as we
+came round a sharp curve, I dare say the thought was
+in every one's mind, what would happen if one of the
+leaders fell, or if the driver slipped his hand in gathering
+up the reins to go round the corner. The scenery
+became more wild and formidable, so to speak, at every
+fresh turn. The colossal trees, which challenged
+admiration in the daytime, closed up in greater volume,
+darkening the narrow road completely, so that in an
+hour after entering upon the mountain-range it became
+as black as pitch. The lamps of Buffalo Bill
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
+in the leading carriage were some guide to our driver.
+He had none, and it was with anxiety, renewed every
+ten minutes or so, that we saw the lights in front
+describe a graceful curve, which showed that they
+were passing by one of the dips or cuts of the road.
+It needed skill and judgment for MacLenathan to
+conduct the carriage, because if he drove too close to
+that in front of us, the clouds of dust obscured the
+view, and if he dropped too far behind he lost the
+benefit of the lights. By enormous trunks of trees,
+by piles of timber, through deep cuttings in the rock,
+plashing over watercourses, descending swiftly into
+river-beds, and splashing through the fords over
+boulders, then climbing up steep hillsides, on and
+on, it seemed as though the night would never
+come to an end, and we inwardly, and audibly too, expressed
+our regret that we had not started a little
+earlier; but still there was an almost pleasurable
+excitement in holding on as we swept round one of
+these terrible gorges, and tried to look down into
+the gulf beneath. That last stage seemed interminable,
+but towards 9 o'clock at night the driver of the
+coach in front announced that we were getting "near
+at last"; and lucky it was, for his lights were giving
+out. "It is just as well that they did not," said our
+driver, "because it would be bad for you." "Why?"
+"Well," he said, "you would just have to get out
+and walk! I would not undertake to drive any one
+in the dark along such a road as this." Presently we
+heard the noise of rushing water, and gained the bank
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
+of a stream flowing with swiftness over a shingle bed.
+This we crossed, and in half an hour more, through
+the dark belt of trees in front, lights were discerned,
+and, crossing another stream and a bridge, our wearied
+horses were pulled up in front of the hotel, a large
+wooden building, on the steps of which were the landlord
+and his staff, and most of the inmates turned out
+to greet and inspect the travellers who had been long
+expected. "It is a bad country to go driving about
+in the dark," said Mr. Bruce, the landlord, a sentiment
+in which we thoroughly agreed. There was a
+supper in the common room, to which, albeit the fare
+was primitive enough, we did ample justice. Travellers
+have complained of the charges along the road,
+but, considering the distance which all articles have
+to be carried to the Valley, the heavy duties, and the
+shortness of the season, I do not think that any one
+with experience of Swiss inns would complain much;
+and if the traveller desires to drink claret, he must not
+be astonished if he pays eight or nine shillings a bottle
+for it. The ordinary fare, at hotel prices, is quite
+good enough for hungry people, and eggs, milk, and
+bread are abundant, and not dear. The bedrooms,
+sufficiently simple in all their appointments, are good
+enough to be welcome to tired people, for there is
+a fair bed to lie upon, and the sheets, as far as our
+experience went, were clean and fresh. Nor were the
+insect horrors, of which we may have some knowledge
+in parts of Europe, to be dreaded, not even
+mosquitoes at this time of year.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Soon after dawn a thunderstorm broke over the
+valley, hail and torrents of rain, and the landlord congratulated
+us upon the cooling effect it would have on
+the air, and on the absence of dust, which is rather troublesome
+at times. It was necessary to make an early
+start in the morning, for it is a long journey to the
+Yosemite. For some years past the Valley has become a
+kind of American Chamouni, and if Americans swarm
+over Europe in search of the sublime and beautiful,
+they cannot be accused of neglecting altogether their
+own country. The first thing I saw, on walking out
+on the verandah of the hotel, was the stage-coach and
+six horses, with eight ladies and nine gentlemen,
+loading up for the Valley. They had arrived late the
+night before, a little in advance of us, and yet the
+ladies, bravely attired for the road, were all in their
+place in the <i>char à bancs</i> long before 7. Travellers
+frequently stay at Bruce's, and our host promises
+good sport to any one who will make it his headquarters;
+but I cannot speak with any confidence on
+that point myself; still I should think it a very pleasant
+quarter for a man who had nothing else to do,
+and who had an aptitude for climbing, to go about
+looking out big game. We heard talk of pheasants,
+but saw none: the bird which is called by that name
+not being entitled to it, according to ornithologists.
+In front of the hotel was laid out the skin of
+a cinnamon bear, which had been shot by an Austrian
+gentleman&mdash;"<a name="Fritz" id="Fritz">Count Fritz Thumb</a>," the landlord called
+him&mdash;a few days previously, and which was to be sent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
+after him as a trophy of his skill. "But," says
+Boniface, "it was not he shot him at all; it was 'is
+old Injun hunter." Grizzlies, he said, were rare, but
+they were to be found if you went up high enough,
+and as he spoke he pointed up to the mountains
+towering away in the distance in grand Alpine proportions.
+Deer were common enough, and there were
+some tame specimens of the ordinary black deer
+running about in the enclosure. We had an early
+start, but not quite so early as the Americans; and it
+was wonderful how well our four hardy horses did
+the first stage, six and twenty miles, including some
+very sharp ascents from the Hotel.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time we got out and walked up the
+sharp bits, diverging to the right or left to gather the
+lovely flowers which grew on the roadside, or halting
+to admire the giant trees which clothed the mountain
+ridges. Pitiable ignorance! not to know the names of
+the plants or shrubs or wonderful bunches of blossoms,
+among which fluttered the most magnificently coloured
+butterflies. Woodpeckers of many different species
+uttered their quaint notes in jerky flight from tree to
+tree, or peered at the travellers from the shelter of the
+branches. Firs, pines, and spruces of enormous size,
+and trees to me unknown, formed a dense forest on
+each side of the road; but now and then we caught
+glimpses of the stupendous ranges of the alps beyond.
+It was lamentable to see the waste and wreck wrought
+in this wondrous wealth of timber&mdash;reckless, wicked
+waste. Charred trunks stood with leafless arms
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
+withered and black, or lay prone among the ferns in
+myriads. This was, we were told, the work of shepherds,
+who think nothing of setting fire to one of the
+finest trees in the world to warm themselves for an
+hour, and are delighted with a conflagration which
+may lay a hillside in ashes. And the Indians too are
+held to have their share in the destruction. There
+was enough of timber wasted and destroyed mile after
+mile to build a city. The nemesis must come; already
+the alarm has been sounded, and the State authorities
+here and elsewhere are trying to prevent the mischief.
+I have often had occasion to regret my ignorance of
+botany <i>inter alia</i>; but never did I feel it more than
+when I was walking up the road, on each side of
+which was a carpet of flowers, a maze of shrubs and
+plants&mdash;dense brushwood&mdash;to not one of which could
+I give a name. We arrived at the Halfway House at
+12.35 as much pleased as the horses which brought us
+there so well at the respite, for it was an awful "pull
+up," and the coachman did his work at high pressure.
+In the course of our pilgrimage we had found a very
+pleasant <i>divertissement</i>. The Major, Mr. White, and
+Mr. Jerome had excellent voices, and from time to time
+they burst into song, giving with great effect the
+quaint negro melodies, which are now made familiar to
+us in London, from a very large <i>répertoire</i>; and so the
+afternoon passed in quiet enjoyment as we climbed the
+hills on foot or in the carriages&mdash;snatches of talk,
+exclamations of wonder and delight, and outbursts
+of the 'Golden Slipper,' 'O! that 'Possum,' 'The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
+Ark,' 'John Brown,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' and other
+choruses.</p>
+
+<p>It was near 4 o'clock when the driver, who had been
+silent for some time, looking round at us occasionally
+as one who would say, "Wait a little till I surprise
+you," suddenly pulling up, said, "Now, here you are.
+This is Fascination Point! Won't you get down
+a bit?" And, lo! there indeed lay before us a scene
+of indescribable grandeur. I know nothing like the
+effect produced by Yosemite Valley when seen for the
+first time from this point. It has a characteristic
+which no other similar view I am acquainted with
+possesses. You take in at one glance stupendous
+mountain-ranges, all but perpendicular, beyond which
+you see the snowy crests of the great Sierra, the
+profound valley between them, a long vista of extraordinary
+magnificence, of cascades and precipitous
+waterfalls, and far down below a silvery river rushing
+through a forest composed of the noblest trees in the
+world, with patches of emerald-green sward and bright
+meadows.</p>
+
+<p>I see that by a slip of the pen I have miscalled the
+place from which we got our first view of the wondrous
+scene. But I have a right to change the name for my
+own use. What the driver said was "Inspiration
+Point." I prefer my mistake, for the view inspires
+you with no feeling save that of wonder and delight.
+These sublime scenes appear to be beyond the reach of
+poetry. Niagara and the Yosemite have not yet found
+a laureate. The peculiar and unique feature of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
+valley seems to me to be the height and boldness of
+the cliffs which spring out from the mountain-sides
+like sentinels to watch and ward over the secrets of
+the gorge; next to that is the number and height of
+the waterfalls; but it is only by degrees and by comparison
+that the mind takes in the fact that the cliffs
+are not hundreds, but thousands of feet high&mdash;that
+these bright, flashing, fleecy cataracts fall for thousands
+of feet&mdash;that the rent which has been torn in the
+heart of the mountains, till it is closed by the awful
+granite portals beyond which no mortal may pass,
+extends for miles. I thought as I gazed that it were
+pity to descend, lest a nearer view might destroy the
+effect of that <i>coup d'&oelig;il</i>; but the driver had regulated
+the period for rapture. He whipped us up to our
+places by word of mouth, and the carriages renewed
+their course, now striking by bold zigzags down into
+the valley for our destination, which was still six
+miles away. I shall not attempt to describe my own
+feelings, far less can I pretend to tell what others,
+probably far more susceptible of the beauty and
+grandeur of what we beheld than I am, may have felt
+at the succession of the awe-inspiring revelations
+of the tremendous grandeur of the Valley which came
+upon us. What is the use of rolling off a catalogue of
+names and figures?&mdash;even the brush of the painter,
+charged with the truest colours and guided by the
+finest hand and eye, could never do justice&mdash;that is,
+could never give a just idea of these cliffs and waterfalls.
+"El Capitan! Oh, that's the name, is it?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
+Three thousand three hundred feet high!" And then
+you try to take in what that means. "And it's 3500
+feet down to the Valley? Dear me!" "And that is
+the Cathedral Rock? And those two peaks are the
+Spires? I don't exactly see the resemblance; do
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a sort of wail of delight from us all as we
+came on the "Bridal Veil Fall"; and I do not think
+any one cared to know that it was just 60 short of
+1000 feet high! Surely one of the most graceful,
+lovely <i>chutes d'eau</i> on earth, lost though it be from
+view behind the rocks at the close of its feathery
+flight! But there was no stopping to look at anything;
+relentless Fate drove us down and on, till the
+wheels rolled more evenly, and at last we came to
+the bed of the valley&mdash;some 1800 yards broad, opening
+out here and there yet wider&mdash;and we rejoiced in the
+sight of the bright clear water of the Merced, child
+of innumerable icy mothers, flashing, sparkling, dashing
+and brawling, like a myriad Lodores, between her
+banks decked with flowers and covered with forest
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there dashed out of a glade two cavaliers,
+and made full tilt at the leading carriage. "To
+arms!" Not a bit of it! Nor banditti or Injuns&mdash;of
+whom we had met one or two riding sullenly along
+to the hunting-grounds&mdash;no, only two hotel touts
+armed with cards of self-commendation, and not apparently
+in much rivalry, for when told that we had
+engaged our hotel, they galloped off to waylay other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
+travellers, of whose coming they were apprized by our
+driver. Our hotel, I may say by the way, gave us
+full contentment. The site was admirable, commanding
+a full and near view of <i>the</i> Fall of Falls&mdash;the
+Yosemite&mdash;which had so fascinated our eyes that
+we could scarce divert them to any other object&mdash;not
+"Widow's Tears," or "Virgin's Tears," nor the
+"Three Brothers," not anything but the Yosemite!
+And so, when our rooms were pointed out, we made
+off to the spot where the fine cloudlike vapour
+rising above the tree-tops indicated the basin into
+which the waters sought rest after their troubled
+leap.</p>
+
+<p>Our way lay through the usual gathering of stores,
+hotels, livery stables for the horses and ponies
+needed for the excursions, and curiosity dealers' shops,
+to the village street, as it may be termed, shadowed
+by fine trees, under which reposed some Indians&mdash;one
+of whom, an Amazon in yellow toga, went riding full
+gallop past us, her hair falling in a black mat on her
+shoulders, sitting low, in Melton style, regardless of
+poultry, children, and boulders, and vanishing in a
+cloud of dust under the trees. Then we turned to the
+left and crossed the river by a rustic bridge; and as I
+looked down into the dancing waters certain shadow-like
+objects flew up against the current. "Trout?"
+asked I. "Yes, they're trout. They take 'em&mdash;when
+they dew&mdash;five pounds weight. The Injuns catch
+'em. We don't understand it as well." A short walk,
+with eyes ever up-turned, and we come out to a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
+moraine, and, clambering up over a mass of trunks of
+trees and decaying timber, <i>the</i> Falls were before us&mdash;I
+cannot write more&mdash;no adjective will do. "Two
+thousand six hundred and thirty-four feet, mind!"
+says the voice. "I don't care," thought we, "it's
+the most beautiful and wonderful water-jump ever
+seen by human eye." "It only remains," as they
+say, to state that there is first, falling over a sheet
+of granite straight as a wall, a considerable river,
+which in the plunge comes down at once 1600 feet.
+There, in a basin of rock, it collects its scattered
+forces, under cover of eternal spray and cloud, and
+then takes another header of 434 feet to a barrier
+of granite, against which it rages for a mad moment,
+till it swells over and escapes from control by another
+spring of 600 feet sheer down&mdash;and now it is free,
+and rushes past at our feet, a joyous flashing stream.</p>
+
+<p>We returned through the meadows from the Falls,
+and as I was walking in advance of the party a
+snake wriggled across the path, which I struck at
+instinctively with my stick, and was lucky enough to
+kill at the first blow. I exhibited the carcass, or
+whatever a snake's dead body may be, in triumph to
+my companions. Further on our way we fell in with
+an old Frenchman who was carrying a basket of fruit
+from his little garden to the inn. With all the
+courtesy of his country, he offered to Lady Green the
+choicest in his little <i>corbeille</i>. He came from Lorraine
+very long ago to prospect in the States, almost the
+earliest of the pioneers, but he was still strong and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
+active, and he pointed with great satisfaction up to
+a white flag planted on a dizzy height above, which
+he said he had placed with his own hands. The chief
+livery stable keeper is a German named Stegman. The
+first ascent of the Dome was made by a young Scotchman
+named Anderson, from Montrose; so with Indians,
+Americans, Mexicans, Europeans, there is a very
+liberal representation of the nations of the world, in
+the season, in the valley. Mr. Hutchinson, the Conservator
+of the Valley&mdash;one with all the enthusiasm
+of the American character in everything pertaining
+to the country, aggravated in this instance by an
+intense admiration for the valley over which he is
+appointed to watch&mdash;joined us at dinner in the little
+inn. Full of information, bubbling over with anecdote
+and illustration, and replete with all kinds of knowledge
+concentrated upon the one object&mdash;the Valley&mdash;the
+Valley&mdash;and nothing but the Valley. He knows its
+history since the time it was first discovered, and
+its natural history and geological formation, and all
+about the Indians who lived there and their traditions.
+It so happened that the Commissioners of
+the State of California, who are bound to visit the
+public domains, were also at the hotel, and so we
+had quite an unofficial and ceremonious meeting; and
+presently, as we stood in front of the hotel gazing
+up on the peaks, lighted up by the stars, and
+listening to the thunder of the waterfall, a startling
+report burst out on the night, and in another instant
+the echoes repeated from rock to rock were crashing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
+through the Valley with the roar of heaven's artillery.
+It was the first gun of a salute ordered by the Commissioners
+to be fired in honour of the Duke's arrival.
+The effect was very fine, but I doubt whether I did not
+feel full of resentment at the outburst, very much as
+the owls and night-hawks might have been expected to
+feel, if one could judge from their cries. However,
+even a salute and echoes must come to an end, and
+as we were to get up early to start for the Mirror Lake,
+we turned in to bed at an early hour; not, however, to
+sleep, because the indefatigable and numerous company
+in the public room, off which were our bedrooms, were
+in high spirits, and the song and the dance, to the
+accompaniment of an invalid piano, for some time
+asserted their sway.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hutchinson had the Duke out early, because it
+is one of the obligations to see the sun rise, reflected
+in the Mirror Lake&mdash;if you can. There is no fear of
+cloud or rain. In the Mirror Lake is reflected&mdash;or
+was as we saw it&mdash;the precipice at the other side of
+the Valley, the bulk of Mount Watkins (so called from
+a photographer who has been daring and successful in
+his renderings of the Yosemite), and all the surrounding
+scenery. Once a friend and I saw a cow on its
+back in the air, by the shore of a Highland lake.
+The surface was smooth as that of the Mirror before
+us now. It was flapping its tail from side to side,
+and its forelegs were up in the sky. We could not
+make it out at first. There was, in fact, a cow
+standing near the water of the loch; and what we saw
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
+was a reflection of the animal, actually stronger and
+better defined than the object itself. So it was with
+the reflections in the Mirror Lake; but when the sun
+rose over the cliff and we looked at the water, the
+glare was too dazzling. "It was," as Mr. Wright
+remarked, "like the electric light." There were
+curious optical effects produced, some being troubled
+with purple, others with green or yellow in their eyes,
+after a vain attempt to look at the reflection, but that
+did not last long.</p>
+
+<p>We returned to breakfast to make an early start for
+Union and Glacier Points on ponies. Among the
+company at the hotel, introduced by Mr. Hutchinson,
+there was a young lady who was well acquainted with
+the Valley, and who proved to be a very agreeable
+companion in our mountain ride; but it was not long
+ere she was candid enough to let it be known that
+she did not visit the Yosemite out of love of the picturesque
+and beautiful, but that she was interested in
+the sale of photographs of the Valley, and was, in
+fact, a very persuasive and efficient agent of a firm
+in San Francisco, who had thus established an outlying
+picket of great activity and vigilance; and I am sure
+we all hope she may always be as successful with the
+visitors as she was with us. Of what we saw from the
+Glacier Point I must leave others to write or speak.
+It is reached by a zigzag on the mountain-side&mdash;a
+peculium of the maker, and all the "trails," as they are
+called, in the valley are the property of individuals or
+firms who are paid by tariff, and we heard "Eleven
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
+gone up before&mdash;Duke Sutherland, Lady Green, Sir
+Green, Mr. Wright, Mr. Russell, Mr. Jerome coming!
+Sixteen coming up behind!" On the plateau behind
+the cliffs, from which you look down on the Valley and
+at the snowfields on the mountain ranges opposite,
+there is a log house and shanty, and there we had
+a mountain meal ere we began the descent.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing in the way of riding is more disagreeable
+than going down a very sharp mountain-side on a
+pony not, for all you know, very sure-footed, and so
+instead of riding, I resolved to walk, now and then
+taking a short cut, to the great discomfiture of feet
+and boots, although it is three thousand feet to the
+bottom, and make the best of my way and the
+most of the road, which is very fair, down the zig zags.
+I reached the plain thoroughly hot and tired,
+and bathed in perspiration, in fifty-seven minutes.
+The horsekeeper, who came down with the rest of
+the party, seemed to have been affected by the
+rarity of the atmosphere or something else up at the
+mountain hostelry, for he insisted on it that I had
+ridden down, and demanded his horse. "What the
+thunder, Russell, have you done with my horse?" he
+asked again and again. Satisfied for the time by my
+assurances that I had not ridden at all, he went off, and
+then, thinking over the matter, came back again to
+repeat his question, till I told him I would not answer
+it any more. He was an amusing fellow in his way,
+and affable. He called the Duke "Sutherland," now
+and then putting Mr. before it. As he was watering
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
+his horses, he said: "Here, Mister Sutherland, lay
+hold of the bucket, will you, whilst I take a turn at
+this one." And the Duke did so with alacrity. It was
+a day of incessant activity. No sooner had the mountain
+party come down than they were off again to drive
+through the Valley. The rest of our party had already
+executed masterly investigations at the foot of all the
+waterfalls; admired the Bridal Veil and the Widow's
+Tear, as one cascade is satirically termed, "because,"
+says the guide, "it dries up in six months;" had
+driven and ridden everywhere and seen everything,
+and we had to do the same; but it would need a week
+of conscientious work to exploit the Valley thoroughly.
+At half-past 7, the dinner hour, the little inn was
+swarming with people; the stage had arrived with
+fresh contingents. Every place was full, and what
+with the clatter of knives and forks, the clamour of
+waiters, the tumult of voices laughing and talking, it
+was scarcely possible to conceive that a few short years
+ago this valley was in the exclusive possession of the
+Indian and the wild beast. There is now, however, a
+great conflict of interests, and Mammon is holding his
+revels in the Valley. The State has voted a certain
+sum of money, twenty-five thousand dollars, I think, to
+buy up the interests of the trail-makers; that is, those
+who struck out and made paths to the various objects
+of attraction; but no success has yet been attained
+in the negotiations, and, indeed, I should think it
+a very bad investment for most of them to accept
+their share of such a sum. Macaulay, for example,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
+who made the path up to the point from which we
+descended to-day, must make many hundreds of dollars
+in the height of the season, as he charges so much a
+visitor, and, besides, has a restaurant where they take
+their meals at the top.</p>
+
+<p>Next day (June 5th) we left the Yosemite with the
+satisfactory assurance that we had made the most of
+our time, though we could not believe we had done it
+justice. There were some small "nuages" on the face
+of our "Mirror Lake," caused by changes in the mode
+of conveyance; but we found six horses and one of the
+coaches of the country were better than four horses
+and two carriages of less capacity. Yosemite, I may
+tell my readers, means "Grizzly Bear" (it may be
+"Great Grizzly Bear"); but we only heard of one
+having been thereabouts for a long time, and I believe
+it was thoroughly tamed. After a glorious day in
+the woods, clambering up the steep from the Valley,
+and then on by the road&mdash;the only one&mdash;to Clarke's,
+halted there for the night, when we returned from a
+ceremonious visit to the "Big Trees." We had a most
+delightful ride from Bruce's, and a hard canter back
+through the woods on capital ponies, full of life and
+action, and very sure-footed, but rather inclined to
+have their own way, which was not always that of the
+rider. We turned into bed at Bruce's, quite delighted
+with our expedition, and rather anxious to see the
+road we had traversed in the dark by the garish light
+of day. Every traveller's tale, and every guide-book of
+recent date relating to this part of the world, has a full
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
+account of the dimensions, number, appearance, and
+condition of these wonders of the world. They are either
+prostrate, mutilated, or decaying; not one has survived
+the stormy life he must have led for some 3000 years&mdash;a
+few hundreds more or less do not signify. Those
+which remain upright are scarred by fire and lightning,
+and drop their monster arms, hung with ragged foliage
+and sheets of bright moss, mournfully over the ground
+where their trunks will repose in time to come.
+I cannot conceive any object of the kind so magnificent
+as one of those Washingtonias in the full vigour of
+mature treehood; but we could only fancy what it
+must have been like by measuring the stems, for there
+was not anywhere in the forest a tree to be seen which
+had not suffered. The best way to visit the scene&mdash;for
+it may well be called so&mdash;is to strike out from the
+road on the way to the Yosemite before the halt at
+Bruce's; but the hotel-keepers and stage-drivers will
+persuade the stranger, if they can, to defer the
+excursion till his return from the Valley, so as to make
+a half-day more out of him.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 6th.</i>&mdash;All up at 5 o'clock, and off soon after
+6 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> The first stage, eleven miles, we did in two
+hours and ten minutes&mdash;a very pretty road; the
+second stage, eight miles, in forty-four minutes. The
+ravages made by fires are most deplorable. We had
+passed through this great forest track in the dark, but
+now seen in the morning light, the trunks of magnificent
+trees rotting on the ground, or standing upright
+with lifeless arms, consumed at the base, were visible
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
+everywhere. It is difficult to find out the exact truth
+about the cause of these fires. Some few people said
+"it was the Indians," but the weight of testimony attributes
+them to the shepherds, who for the most trifling
+purposes kindle a great fire. In some of the large
+trees they have hollowed out regular chambers, and of
+course the tree dies. Such waste of timber! For
+mile after mile we passed scenes of desolation which
+ere long those who allowed them will have cause to
+regret. From time to time we encountered on the
+road trains of waggons drawn by teams of handsome
+mules with bells, and had occasion to admire the
+economy of labour exhibited in the management, by
+which the driver is enabled to work a powerful break
+with one hand whilst he drives with the other. The
+next stage, of fourteen miles, was over an exceedingly
+bad road; but the horses were good, and we rattled
+along at a capital speed down towards the plain. Once
+the quick-eyed driver, pulling up suddenly, said, "See
+that rattle?" leaped down and made towards the
+bush; and as we followed him, sure enough we heard
+distinctly the noise of the snake, which he had intercepted
+on its way to a rabbit hole. It took refuge in
+a clump of bushes with gnarled roots, and coiled itself
+round one of the branches; but by a course of judicious
+and rather nervous poking it was driven from its
+vantage ground, and trying to escape was killed by
+the driver with a blow of his whip, followed by a good
+many unnecessary strokes from the rest of the party.
+It was over three feet long, and had just been making
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
+an evening meal upon a rabbit, which it had left
+where we had startled it; and it was evident from its
+swollen appearance that it had been for some time
+engaged in the warren close at hand.</p>
+
+<p>At 10.20 we reached Fresno, which is what the
+Americans call "quite a place," containing not only an
+hotel, a restaurant, and a store, but a shop where
+photographs were exhibited. The <i>chef-d'&oelig;uvre</i>, a
+portrait of a Spanish lady 140 years of age, living at
+Los Angeles, did not, however, commend itself to our
+taste. We halted at Coarse Gold at 11.40, and left at
+12.35. Mr. Jerry Loghlan&mdash;who excused himself for
+not working on the ground that "there was no use
+in it, as there was nothing to be had," the mines being
+worked "out"&mdash;whose acquaintance we had made on
+the way up, a huge, broad-shouldered <i>vaurien</i>, was still
+hanging about with his specimens of quartz, gold, and
+rattlesnakes' tails, and a black eye recently acquired
+in battle.</p>
+
+<p>After a long, hot, and dusty drive, it was with
+no small gratification we made out on the flat the
+houses of Madera, and after a time the carriages of the
+special train. The air is so bright and pure that
+the distances are very deceptive, and it was nearly
+5 o'clock <span class="s08">P.M.</span> before we reached the station, which
+had been visible for more than an hour previously.
+It was pleasant news to hear that the little German
+barber at the way-side had got baths all ready. In
+the rear of his shop there was a row of apartments,
+each provided with a clean zinc bath, hot and cold
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
+water to turn on at discretion, and an abundance of
+towels. This in the centre of a waste seemed very
+creditable to the civilisation of the people. I should
+like to know in what part of Europe you would get
+similar comfort under similar circumstances. I am
+afraid there are many parts of the British Islands
+where a traveller would demand such a luxury in vain.
+And the barber was there to shave those who needed
+it, and to give you all the news of the day if you
+wanted it. He was a Prussian, and he grinned from
+ear to ear as, in reply to my question whether he
+had served, he said: "Serve, indeed! Not I. I came
+away and escaped from all that nonsense. There is
+not a king or an emperor or a prince that I would
+fight for. Why should I?" "But," said I, "you
+would have to fight for the Republic here if it were in
+danger; and that would not be fighting for your
+fatherland." "Yes," said he, "it would, for this is
+my fatherland now. But I do not want to fight for
+it either if I can help it. Fighting is nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>Our excellent stewards received us, if not with open
+arms, with smiling faces. The carriages were trim
+and clean and fresh, the tables spread out, and all
+kinds of dainties provided for the evening meal. We
+rested quietly for the night in the siding at Madera,
+and got under weigh at 5 o'clock on the morning of
+June 7th, the train being timed so as to reach San
+Francisco at 12.30.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
+SAN FRANCISCO.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+The Palace Hotel&mdash;General McDowell&mdash;Palo-Alto&mdash;The "Hoodlums"&mdash;The
+Real Sir Roger&mdash;Exiles in the Far West&mdash;The
+Chinese Population&mdash;For and Against them&mdash;The Sand Lot&mdash;Fast
+Trotters&mdash;The Sea Lions&mdash;The Diamond Palace&mdash;The
+Coloured Population&mdash;"Eastward Ho!"
+</p>
+
+<p>The British Consul, Mr. Booker, who has been
+watching over the interests of the Queen's subjects
+for some thirty years here, and who is an institution
+by himself, met the train at a place called, I think,
+Porta Costa, and welcomed the Duke and his friends.
+There had been for some days an infusion of the
+Chinaman in the general element of life along the
+line, but here it became concentrated, and then ceased
+to attract much attention. As the train approached
+the wide expanse of muddy water from the Sacramento,
+which charges down with impetuous volume,
+and colours the bay with its turbid stream, we could
+form an idea of some of the advantages in the expanse
+of navigable river, that had, however, lain long without
+appreciation but for the bright red gold possessed
+by San Francisco. The bay is animated; white canvassed
+craft stud its waters, and the smoke of steamers
+pollutes the clear, bracing air. Italian fishermen are
+busy with line and net, and flights of ducks and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
+squadrons of gulls and cormorants show that the
+waters are well stocked. It was too late in the year
+to see the country in the full affluence of its wealth
+of fruit and crops, of hay and corn, and the hillsides
+and fields are now disappointingly brown. Presently
+we arrived at Oakland, where the train was run out
+on a pier 3500 yards long, to the steam ferry-boat
+which was to convey us across to San Francisco. The
+ferry-boat was crowded, for Oakland is a city of some
+50,000 people; and of course it had once on a time,
+not very remote, only a few sheds and insignificant
+houses. From this side of the bay the city of the
+Golden Gate, some miles away, was now visible in all
+its pride of place&mdash;pride but not beauty, now at least&mdash;for
+the city presents no great attraction to the
+eye. The streets, running in parallel lines at right
+angles to the quay right up the sandy hillside,
+look like the ribs of some stranded monster, "lank
+and lean and brown." The most prominent object is
+the hotel to which we are going, which towers far
+over the general level of house-top, steeple, and factory-chimney.</p>
+
+<p>There is a little pamphlet, crammed with statistics
+and with an array of figures and superlatives enough to
+daze one, given to the guests of the Palace Hotel; but
+those who are in that happy category scarcely need the
+information, and those who are not could not derive
+any idea of the building from the repetition of the
+ciphers which are to be found in the guide-book.
+The drawing on the outside affords the best notion of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
+the size, but only actual purview can enable one to
+judge of the excellent arrangements, the service, the
+table. For once the American idol "Immensity" is
+not overlaid. "'Tis blinding bright&mdash;'tis blazing
+white! O Vulcan! what a glow!" Electric lights
+flooding the court with brightness beyond description.
+And what a court! Sweetness and light indeed!
+In the great quadrangle, 144 feet by 84, there are
+fountains playing, groups of statuary, and exotic plants,
+and, tier after tier, rise the pillared terraces outside
+the seven storeys of which the main building consists,
+painted a lustrous white, shining like purest Parian.
+There are 755 rooms, abounding in conveniences,
+and comfortably luxurious. Each is provided with
+high-pressure hot and cold water, and there is an
+elaborate system of ventilation, alarms, conductors,
+pneumatic tubes, telephones, and "annunciators" for
+fire, letters, servants, &amp;c. The beds are excellent; the
+furniture admirable; and this vast structure, 120 feet
+high, 275 feet broad, and 350 feet deep, is not only fire,
+but&mdash;listen&mdash;"earthquake proof"; so says the bill of
+fare, and so says ex-Senator W. Sharon, the proprietor.
+I have not the least desire to test the truth of the averment,
+but if I must be in a hotel when an earthquake
+visits the city in which I am, let me be in the Palace,
+San Francisco. A man may live here in the enjoyment
+of a pretty continuous series of meals and one of the
+best bedrooms for four dollars a day, and there is a
+lower tariff of bed and board at three dollars a day.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 8th.</i>&mdash;Our first day was rendered exceedingly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
+pleasant by the kindness of General McDowell. The
+weather did its very best to prevent our enjoying it, and
+was signally defeated. San Francisco is perhaps the
+windiest city in the world, and at this time of year there
+is almost always a storm in the harbour, and a steady,
+powerful, and somewhat chilly blast, setting in a little
+before noon, and lasting throughout the day until
+nearly sundown, up the streets. The General's aide-de-camps
+came over early to the hotel, in full uniform,
+in honour of Major-General Green, but General
+McDowell appeared in mufti, which eased us down
+a little. A powerful steamer, the "<i>General Macpherson</i>,"
+was prepared for the party, which was
+swollen by a considerable number of gentlemen invited
+by our host to meet the Duke, and the gentlemen
+from Topeka, who were included in the invitation.
+The excursion afforded a favourable opportunity of
+inspecting the city defences. From Alcatraz Fort,
+Point and Presidio Island batteries, which would not
+be considered very formidable as far as armament is
+concerned, although their position affords great advantages
+for torpedo defence, salutes were fired in
+honour of Sir Henry Green. But in the case of
+some of us the sight was marred by the rising sea,
+which increased to an inconvenient height as the
+steamer reached the Seal Rocks, close to the entrance
+to the bay. Of the seals I shall give an account
+farther on. They did not seem to mind the steamer
+very much until she blew her whistle, when many of
+them splashed into the sea. At the termination
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
+of the trip, which lasted some four hours, General
+McDowell entertained the party at his official quarters,
+which are beautifully situated on a bluff overhanging
+the water of the bay.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 9th.</i>&mdash;We spent, in some respects, an abortive
+and deceitful day; not, indeed, that there was anything
+disappointing about our entertainment at Belmont,
+under the auspices of ex-Senator Sharon; but that
+we started full of enterprise, and intent upon inspecting
+the great works of the Spring Valley Reservoir, and of
+making an excursion through what was described as a
+very beautiful county whence is brought the water
+supply of the great city in which we were sojourning.
+However, though we were baulked in the object of our
+expedition, the day passed, and not in the least degree
+unpleasantly, and instead of going to the Lakes we
+drove about the neighbourhood of Belmont, and visited
+several country seats.</p>
+
+<p>No one who visits San Francisco should omit taking
+an early opportunity of going to Palo-Alto to inspect
+the stock of General Stanford's thorough-breds, and the
+breeding establishment, which as a sample of perfect
+order and management cannot be surpassed. I cannot
+answer for the figures, but I was informed that the
+owner spends 25,000<i>l.</i> a year upon the maintenance of
+his stud and stables, and that he has not as yet sold a
+colt or filly, or parted with a single animal; sires,
+mares, and young brood now amounting to about 700
+head. They are beautifully housed in detached stables
+fitted up with every convenience that a horse of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
+highest pedigree and most luxurious taste can desire.
+I was particularly struck with the perfect silence
+which prevailed throughout the stables. No shouts to
+"stand over there," and none of that "&mdash;&mdash;" (groom's
+expletive) which is so common in our country. And
+partly owing perhaps to that mode of treatment, and to
+gentleness in handling, all the horses without exception
+seemed tractable and sweet-tempered. High-bred
+stallions stood out in the open for our inspection, and
+allowed themselves to be rubbed and felt without even
+laying down their ears or raising a hind-leg from the
+ground. In reply to a question respecting a remarkably
+beautiful animal, which seemed to have a little
+more fire in him, the head groom said "You may walk
+under his belly if you like," and then and there he told
+one of the grooms to do so, which the man did, without
+attracting any unusual degree of attention from the
+animal. Outside one of the large blocks of stables
+there is a kind of testing arena, in which we were told
+it was the pleasure of General Stanford, when he was
+at home, to sit watching the performance of his young
+horses. It is an ellipse, like a large circus, bordered
+with a hoarding, and in the centre there is a raised
+stage for the visitors, on which are revolving chairs.
+The riding-master, with an attendant, performing the
+functions of the late Mr. Widdicombe, sets the animal
+in motion, checking him when he breaks into a gallop.
+The speed at which the animal trots the ellipse is
+known by the time marked on a chronometer, and the
+fact is recorded for the information of the inspectors,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
+who can turn round their chairs and follow the action
+of the horse as it trots round the ring.</p>
+
+<p>The district of the State in which Palo-Alto is
+situated boasts of several residences of the Californian
+millionaires. One house which we visited, I think
+belonging to Mr. Flood, furnished the most ornate and
+beautiful examples of woodwork that were ever seen
+by any of the party. The house, which was as large
+as a good-sized English country mansion, is constructed
+of timber of the finest quality, beautifully worked,
+painted and varnished; and with moderate care a mansion
+of this kind will last, in this climate, a couple of
+hundred years, which to the American mind is an
+eternity. There were artists from New York, and the
+staff of an upholsterer and decorator of great renown
+from the Empire City were still busily engaged in the
+place as we went through the rooms. The magnificent
+halls, reception-rooms, billiard-rooms, library, bedrooms,
+all fitted up with extraordinary luxuriousness,
+but in a somewhat florid taste, were of wood, the doors
+of many of the apartments arresting attention by their
+extraordinary beauty and finish. The ceilings decorated
+in fresco by Italian artists, and bright windows filled
+with stained glass gave an appearance of light and
+grace to the whole residence. The kitchen arrangements
+were marvels of ingenuity, and one envied the butler
+who would have such a pantry as that which was displayed
+for our inspection. Some of the pictures which
+were ready to be placed on the walls were remarkable,
+however, only for the richness of their frames; and,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
+indeed, we heard that the excellent proprietor was not
+a man of very cultivated taste; a child of fortune, in
+the prime of life and of money-making, spending a
+portion of his enormous wealth with an easy hand, but
+destitute of what is called book-learning, and leaving
+to some future generation the cultivation of the graces
+and the acquirement of accomplishments which the
+circumstances of his early life had denied him to effect.</p>
+
+<p>It had been arranged that we should return to San
+Francisco to dinner, but Senator Sharon had in his
+secret heart resolved that we should do nothing of the
+kind, or at least, that if we did so, it should only be
+after we had partaken of such a feast at Belmont as
+would very much indispose us to test the capabilities
+of the <i>chef</i> of the Palace Hotel. From Palo-Alto accordingly
+we were driven to the charming country house,
+some miles away, of the ex-senator of Oregon, and we
+were regaled there, after some delay, at a very elaborate
+<i>déjeûner</i>, sent out from San Francisco. It was nigh
+8 o'clock ere we got back to the city; and the night
+ended by what might well be called "an excursion"
+to the Baldwin Theatre, which was at the time the
+most attractive of the places of entertainment of that
+sort open in the city. As some of us were walking
+back, after the play was over, with an American friend,
+talking of the "hoodlums," famous rowdies, who, we
+were assured, had been of late days utterly broken up
+by the vigilance of the police, our attention was attracted
+to a number of lads smoking at the corner of the street.
+Our friend said "Hoodlums broken up! There they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
+are&mdash;don't you believe it. That's a lot of them, and
+if you were alone you might find out very unpleasantly
+that there are plenty of them."</p>
+
+<p>The San Francisco journalists possess astonishing
+powers of imagination. I rubbed my eyes when I read
+that I had described "with eloquence the similarity
+between a marsh at San Bruno and a patch of jungle
+in the north-west of Scinde, where I had the felicity
+of spending three weeks with General Green while
+the natives were arranging a plan to capture the
+party and cut our throats." I never was in the north-west
+of Scinde in my life, and, although I had the
+pleasure of passing a longer time in his company in
+the United States, and of being on the same plateau
+before Sebastopol when he was there, for a still longer
+period, many years before, I never spent three weeks
+there with General Green. The Duke was described
+as "professing, but showing, little enthusiasm." However,
+these matters are of very slight interest or
+importance; only one wonders how many of the readers
+of this sort of literary work believe in it. One of our
+party has, according to a local paper, become a clergyman,
+and now rejoices in the style and title of "the
+Bishop," by which he is universally addressed by the
+party.</p>
+
+<p>While in the train, on our way to Belmont, I had
+the pleasure of being introduced to a gentleman
+who, although a lawyer in very large practice, is
+General of the State Volunteers; and in the course
+of conversation, I heard that he had papers containing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
+the statement of a gentleman who had visited, and
+which convinced him that the real Roger Tichborne
+was living not very far from San Francisco. General
+Barnes, whose name and character stand high in the
+city of the Golden Gate, and whom I found to be a
+gentleman of great intelligence, seemed perfectly
+satisfied by the story told by this new "claimant";
+but what he mentioned to me did not at all tend
+to create in my mind any notion that he was not an
+impostor, and especially were my doubts confirmed by
+the quotations which General Barnes made from some
+of the narrative, in which there was a ridiculous jumble
+of French and English, in order to justify, apparently,
+the stress placed by the "claimant" in his story on
+that part of his life which was passed in France. He
+spoke of his uncle as "mon oncle," and of Thursday as
+"Jeudi," and so on. However, General Barnes appeared
+to be so impressed by the truthfulness of the man's
+bearing, and by the full details he gave him at an
+audience in which he supplied the facts for the
+consecutive narrative which I was promised, that I
+expressed a desire to read it. General Barnes subsequently
+sent me a long written paper containing the
+heads of the claimant's story, a perusal of which
+strengthened the conviction I had previously entertained.
+I only mention this circumstance because
+there was a report spread throughout the Press, by the
+agency of one of the great telegraphic associations
+which furnish the American public with intelligence,
+that the Duke of Sutherland and myself had interviewed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
+the real Roger Tichborne at San Francisco, and
+had satisfied ourselves that he was the man; and
+innumerable "headings" were invented for this supposed
+interview, of which I was soon made aware on
+my return westward in every newspaper that I read.
+I promptly denied the statement that the Duke or
+myself had seen the new claimant, and although the
+denial appeared in print I was exasperated day after
+day by being asked questions afterwards with regard
+to this supposed conversation with Tichborne at San
+Francisco, and by inquiries as to my real impression;
+so it would appear that no one had seen or paid any
+attention to the refutation of the story which had
+brought down on my devoted head communications
+from friends of other Tichbornes, of whom there are
+several living, some in poverty and others in comparative
+affluence, in various cities and districts of the United
+States. I had further the mortification of seeing it
+stated in print that I had used disparaging words in
+alluding to the credulity of General Barnes, which was
+an entirely baseless fabrication. With all the extraordinary
+keenness of the American mind generally,
+there is associated with it a considerable amount of the
+Anglo-Saxon quality which is termed "gullibility,"
+and the land swarms with impostors who make a living
+out of the easy faith of the population. I do not speak
+merely of spiritualists, quacks, and professors of peculiar
+religions or medical dogmas, nor of the preachers
+of eccentric forms of faith or unbelief, but of the
+mass of persons who contrive to get an existence by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
+representing that they are "someone else." Although
+their tricks are well known, the trade still flourishes.
+They are always the "sons of peers," who have got
+into disgrace with their families, but who will eventually
+be owners of castles of historic fame and of enormous
+estates; "distinguished soldiers"; "Maids of Honour
+to the Queen," who for some unknown reasons are
+living in small out-of-the-way villages in the West;
+or political conspirators who have played a great part
+on some distinguished stage and have saved themselves
+from the consequences of defeated enterprize by
+taking refuge in the States. And then there are
+hordes of persons who are known by the title of "confidence
+men," who travel about on the trains or in the
+steamers, looking out for victims, or lounging about
+the bars and saloons, waiting for their prey in the shape
+of some facile and easy-eared stranger, who in consideration
+of their merits and distress shall give them
+temporary assistance. Sometimes, doubtless, there are
+cases of very real suffering, sorrow, and poverty, to
+which exile in the United States affords a melancholy
+refuge. I was obliged to hear in one great city of a
+gallant soldier who, reduced to poverty by no fault of
+his own, had quitted England and given up the
+society of his friends, and lived in a small suburb of
+a town on the coast of the Pacific, his secret known
+only to one or two officials, shunning all contact with
+his countrymen and evading as far as possible all
+inquiries of his friends. In San Francisco, where
+there is a poor-house open to strangers and to native-born
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
+Americans alike, there are, I am told, to be met
+with extraordinary exemplifications of the "downs"
+of fortune. Adventurous and daring spirits, and pioneers
+of civilisation, at one time probably possessed
+of wealth which was wasted in dissipation, or lost in
+unfortunate speculations, are there, talking of the days
+that are gone, in all languages of the world, and awaiting
+their end; while others who started with them in
+the same race are building their palaces or revelling in
+the enjoyment of wealth, compared to which our
+greatest fortunes are, if figures can be trusted, a mere
+bagatelle. How rapidly some of these fortunes can be
+made was illustrated by numerous stories connected
+with some of the richest men in California. I was told
+by an eminent tradesman of San Francisco that one
+day a miner came into his establishment to buy a
+watch, which he said must be cheap and good, for he
+wanted something he could trust to in the matter of
+time, as he was going off with a party on an exploring
+expedition after gold. This was in the early time of
+the great "booms" in the West. He selected a watch,
+for which he paid $40, and departed. The following
+day he appeared in the shop and asked to see
+the proprietor, and then, producing the watch, he said
+he would like to have $30 for it, as he had lost all his
+money in a "spree" the night before and must have
+something to start with. The jeweller said, "Well, I
+will return you what you gave me for the watch, as it
+has suffered no harm, and you shall have your $40
+back again." The man went away exceedingly rejoiced,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
+and the incident was forgotten. Some eighteen months
+afterwards a man came to the establishment, and looking
+at rings, gold chains, and jewellery of the most
+costly character, and asking for the best of everything
+that they had got, gave orders which occasioned the
+attendant to have some doubts as to his sanity, or
+certainly as to the means he had of paying the amount,
+which was rapidly running up to tens of thousands of
+dollars. So he sought out his principal. The strange
+customer said, "I suppose you don't know me?"
+which was admitted to be the case. He went on buying
+all the same, making the remark, "You need not
+be uneasy about the money, for So-and-so (the bankers)
+will tell you I am all right, and when you send the
+things home you shall be paid. I am Joe Smith, from
+whom some time ago you took a watch he bought from
+you when he came to your store, and gave him the
+full value for it when he was in want of money," and
+so departed, having shown his gratitude by buying
+6000<i>l.</i> worth of jewellery. This worthy miner is now
+one of the wealthy pillars of the State.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese quarter of San Francisco has been
+described, I will not say <i>ad nauseam</i>, but as often
+as any book has been written which contains an account
+of a visit to the city of the Golden Gate. Of
+course we went there, and saw all that was to be seen
+under the best possible auspices, for Mr. Bee, whom
+I have already mentioned, was our guide and companion,
+assisted by an exceedingly intelligent officer
+of the police force; and on the occasion of our second
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
+visit, when we went to the theatre, we had the advantage
+of being under the protection of the gentleman
+who represents law and order, on behalf of the
+municipality, in connection with the Chinese population
+and the arrangements for theatrical performances.</p>
+
+<p>The inspection of the dreadful den in which the
+opium-smokers were to be seen suggested to my mind
+a train of thought in connection with the traffic which
+I would not willingly have communicated to my
+American friends. It will seem incredible some day
+to the awakened conscience of the nation that we
+should have ever sanctioned such a frightful crime
+as the opium traffic. "It only poisons about two
+millions of people," is the excuse, "and brings in one-sixth
+of the whole revenue of India." If ever it were
+justifiable to utter the exclamation "Perish India!"
+it would be, I believe, in regard to that disgraceful
+source of revenue, and the necessity that is imposed
+upon us, as it is alleged, to raise it, in order to maintain
+the government of our Indian empire. Here in
+San Francisco the State has nothing to do with the
+sale of the poison, and it is very questionable whether
+the police regulations should not be applied to it, just
+as they are to persons who have tried to commit
+suicide, or to the inebriates in public-houses, or to
+places where intemperance is carried on to an extent
+injurious to the public peace. Death is the inevitable
+result of continued indulgence in opium-smoking,
+although it is true that in some cases the victim
+lingers on a few years, utterly indifferent to all the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
+business of life except the one&mdash;the means of supplying
+himself with his only source of enjoyment. I was
+in one of the shops where they sell the drug, and was
+much struck by the cadaverous, sunken faces of the
+unfortunate customers, with bright dreamy eyes,
+trembling limbs, and wasted bodies, who came in to
+buy it. It is cheap enough, in all conscience, as a
+very small quantity suffices to produce what is called
+"the desired effect"; but for its bulk it is exceedingly
+dear, and indulgence in it must consume a
+considerable amount of the earnings of the best-paid
+artisans when they are no longer able to earn sufficient
+to keep them with a full supply. "Then," as our informant
+says, "they will commit any crime to get it."</p>
+
+<p>The general impression made upon me by the appearance
+of the Chinese population was most favourable.
+I do not now speak of what one might see in
+going through the haunts where the police regulations
+assign exclusive possession to certain classes
+of the population, which, sooth to say, seemed numerous
+enough; I refer to the business quarters, and to
+the crowds of cleanly, intelligent, well-behaved people
+of both sexes in the streets. General McDowell, and
+many other persons, for whose opinion the greatest
+respect must be entertained, look with apprehension
+on the effect of the Chinese immigration, and
+have, indeed, declared that it will destroy the Union
+if it be not checked; and these apprehensions are
+based upon the possibility that in time millions on
+millions of the swarming population of China will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
+inundate the United States, gradually overrun town
+after town, usurping all the fields of labour, and beating
+down the white man to the greatest misery by
+competition in every branch of trade, industry, and
+labour. This party has successfully, I believe, impressed
+its views upon a considerable number of
+senators and representatives in the Eastern States,
+who can exercise pressure on the Supreme Government;
+and the treaty recently signed between the
+Republic and China contains provisions which enable
+the authorities at the western seaports to exercise
+considerable control over the current of emigration.
+But, on the other hand, it is alleged that the fears
+which are expressed of a rapidly increasing exodus of
+Chinese from China, and an anabasis into the United
+States, are purely imaginary&mdash;in fact, unreal and pretentious.
+The pro-Chinese party allege that the
+emigration comes from only one port in one province,
+and that you may go all over the West, and ask any
+Chinaman or Chinawoman where he or she comes
+from, and you are met with the invariable answer,
+from the one port. The friends of the Chinese&mdash;arguing,
+moreover, that the State at large is benefited enormously
+by the accession to its resources from the Celestial
+Empire, and that the labour was attacked, not
+because it was cheap, but because it was good; that it
+is now indispensable, for without Chinamen and Chinawomen
+it would be almost impossible to carry on the
+ordinary life of these cities&mdash;allege that the agitation
+which has been so violent in San Francisco is mainly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
+encouraged by those who want to secure the Irish vote.
+Colonel Bee represents these views very strongly. He
+argues that Canton, not larger than the State of New
+Hampshire, is the sole source of emigration. He insists
+on it that there are no more than 100,000 Chinese in
+the whole of the Union, and that for the last ten years
+the emigrants have not sufficed to fill the places of
+those who had gone home with money, never intending
+to return, or who had died. He maintains, indeed, that
+the Chinese are decreasing rather than otherwise; and
+with all the power of figures, which he has at his
+fingers' ends as Consul, demonstrates that a very large
+proportion of the Chinese who are entered as arriving
+at San Francisco and other parts are the same men and
+women as those who came some years previously and
+went back to their native country, returning to gain
+more dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The principal enemies of the Chinese are the Irish,
+who, having monopolised the whole of the work of
+bricklayers, plasterers, carters, porters, and general
+labourers until their arrival, have been forced to
+reduce their rates of labour steadily by the competition
+of the Chinaman.</p>
+
+<p>The part of the population of San Francisco denominated
+the Sand lot, and especially those connected with
+the political associations of the city, do not by any
+means share Colonel Bee's views; but the agitation is
+dying out, and the meetings, which were of weekly
+occurrence, to excite the people against the Mongolians
+have decreased in number, importance, and interest.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
+The directors of public companies, and the contractors
+for public works, are all in favour of the Chinese
+workman, who is sober, industrious, and orderly; and
+although the trade combinations among them are
+exceedingly subtle, and their powers of association
+for trade purposes remarkable, being moreover the
+most ancient in the world, the Chinese in the Western
+States have not as yet taken to indulge in the
+luxury of strikes. As domestic servants, nurses, and
+attendants on children, they appear to be affectionate
+and careful; and nothing could be better than the
+service of the hotel in which we were lodged, the great
+portion of which was carried on by Chinamen and
+women.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 10th.</i>&mdash;In the spacious courtyard of the Palace
+Hotel, at 7 o'clock this morning, there might have
+been observed three well-appointed waggons (as
+Americans call the vehicle more appropriately termed
+"spider" at the Cape), each with two horses of race,
+fast trotters, panting for a spin through the city and
+the Park out to the shores of the Pacific. The Duke
+and Sir H. Green and Mr. Stephen were driven by Mr.
+Howard. Mr. Wright was "personally conducted"
+by Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, and I was put behind a pair of as
+handsome chestnuts as could well be seen anywhere, of
+which the owner and driver (General Barnes) was very
+reasonably proud. The streets of San Francisco, like
+those of most of the American cities we have visited,
+are atrociously paved; the torture of driving over
+boulders is aggravated by the sharp ribs of the tram ways,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
+so that it is not pleasant, if, indeed, it be
+possible, to drive rapidly till the limit of municipal
+incompetence or fraud be passed. But once out on the
+suburbs the chestnuts were invited to step it, and were
+bowling along at a good fourteen miles an hour on our
+way to the Park, over as good a road as horse or man
+ever felt under hoof or foot. The Park not long ago
+was a waste of sand, it is now swarded and planted with
+shrubs, and luxuriant with flowers. Notices that it
+was unlawful to do more than ten miles an hour were
+posted up, but the General did not pay strict attention
+to them till he came near shady places, where experience
+warned him that policemen might be lying
+privily in ambush. The pace was quickened till the
+waggon seemed to fly through the air rather than
+move over the ground. It was the perfection of
+travelling on wheels&mdash;almost as buoyant as a headlong
+gallop. The waggon weighed but 180 lb., the powerful
+animals "scarcely felt it more than their tails."
+I had a turn at the reins by "kind permission" of the
+General. The art of driving trotters needs practice.
+You must keep a strong, steady pull on the head, or
+they "break." Very soon I had the satisfaction of
+making the chestnuts break the law with a vengeance,
+and of hearing the General say, "We are just within
+the three minutes! not ten seconds inside it!"&mdash;that
+is, of trotting at the rate of just twenty miles an hour.
+Up hill and down hill, and along the flat out of the
+Park and over the smooth road, and in half an hour
+the Pacific was in sight, and the murmurs of the surf
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
+rose above the rhythm of the regular beat of the eight
+hoofs in front of us! Cliff House was in view. Seal
+Rocks, in their setting of foam, lay before us, and in
+forty minutes from the time we left the hotel, despite
+policemen, miles of bad pavements, and tramways, we
+drew up at the steps of Cliff House, nine miles from
+San Francisco, and the trotters had not turned a hair.
+From the verandah at the sea front of the hotel, we
+enjoyed for half an hour a spectacle which is, as far as
+I know, unique. At the distance of 500 or 600 yards
+from the beach at our feet there is a group of four
+very rugged rocks, with serrated edges and tops, the
+sides broken here and there into ledges and small platforms.
+They are too small to be called islands, the
+largest being, as it seemed, not 100 yards wide. The
+slopes are not, I think, so steep as they looked on
+the land side. On the two largest of these rocks there
+were herds of sea-lions, so close that we could see,
+through very poor opera-glasses, with the greatest ease,
+their eyes, teeth, and whiskers, as they reposed or played
+with each other. Some had clambered to the highest
+ledges, escalading the sides by a series of painful-looking
+struggles with their flappers; others were fast
+asleep in cosy nooks; some were tossing their heads
+about and making believe to bite each other in sport;
+the younger ones were bent on teasing their fathers
+and mothers by uncouth gambols. As they played or
+moved they uttered cries between a bark and a roar;
+now and then the noise was like that of a pack of
+hounds in full cry, and the effect of the strange sound
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
+mingling with the tumult of the surf and the beat of
+the waves was most singular and "eldrich." Those
+fresh from the sea were shining black, but became
+lighter as they dried. The older ones were not darker
+than cinnamon bears or unwashed sheep. As many of
+those on the rocks had not long left the water the
+general effect of the herd put one in mind of a gathering
+of enormous slugs on cabbages&mdash;not a poetic simile,
+but a just one, I think. Occasionally a sea-lion, hungry
+or bored by his companions, threw himself with a
+splash into the wave, and it was interesting to watch
+the rapidity and actual grace of his movements in the
+sea compared with his laborious efforts on the land.
+One could see them quite clearly through the body of
+the heavy billows; occasionally a bold one would glide
+close on shore and fish in the edge of the surf, raising
+his head and shoulders clear above the surface, and
+then diving out of sight. They were cruising about
+in every direction. You remember the sea-lion at the
+Zoo, of which the French attendant was so fond?
+Well, the creatures below and before us were most of
+them double the size of that fellow, and several exceeded
+the largest ox in size. The monsters are quite
+well known; one is named Ben Butler, "because he
+is such a great beast." They were formerly protected
+by law, but some one thought they killed too many
+fish, and the law was repealed. They are safe all the
+same, for there is a law against the discharge of firearms
+within 300 yards of an inhabited dwelling; Cliff
+House throws its ægis over the sea-lions in that wise;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
+but the quantity of fish which must be devoured by
+these mountainous phocæ (an they be so) daily would
+maintain a decently-sized city. The hide furnishes the
+"sealskin" used to cover trunks, and the body yields
+oil fat, and the tusks are close, white, and hard. These
+sea-lions breed far away up north, and come with their
+young regularly every year to the same resorts; but
+incessant war is waged upon them by the sealers and
+whalers, so that the chances are against the beast
+where he is not protected by law, and their numbers
+do not increase. Altogether, the spectacle was one
+never to be forgotten. A hotel, with oysters awaiting
+us for a forebreakfast refection in the background,
+waggons from Michigan, horses from Kentucky, all the
+apparatus of civilised life close at hand, the Pacific
+and its strange wild denizens at our feet! "Let us
+turn in and have an oyster." "What! oysters in
+June?" "Yes, and good ones too." In this favoured
+land oysters are in season all the year round. There are
+no oysters found on the coast, I am told, and they will
+not breed. They are brought all the way from the
+Atlantic coast when they are mere oysterlets, and they
+are laid down in the Pacific, where they grow fat and
+large, but are not "crossed in love," and therefore are
+fit to be eaten from January to January. They are
+about the size of a spring chicken, and need some
+courage on the part of an assailant who desires to
+dispose of them as he would a native.</p>
+
+<p>This was our last day in the city of the Golden Gate,
+and the photographers were masters of the situation;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
+and there was much <i>débris</i> of sight-seeing to sweep up&mdash;visits
+to be made, shops to be inspected, among
+which I must mention specially the Diamond Palace
+of Colonel Andrews, one of the handsomest jeweller's
+"stores" in the world, though it is not as large as the
+establishments of the principal firms in London, Paris,
+Vienna, or as Tiffany's in New York. The distinctive
+feature of the interior is the decoration of the paintings
+of fair women, on the ceiling and the walls above the
+cases, by necklaces, diadems, zones, and other feminine
+ornaments of real diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and
+pearls. The pictures are the work of an Italian artist
+of merit, and the general effect is very striking; but I
+doubt whether it is a good way of inducing people to
+buy the articles which bedeck the ideal beauties. At
+Bradley and Rulofson's we saw photographs of many
+of our friends, and had one more proof of the smallness
+of the world. Every one we knew seemed to have
+visited San Francisco. There we all submitted to
+inevitable fate, and left our negatives behind us, but
+the Duke was captured by a rival photographic institution,
+and had a sitting all to himself.</p>
+
+<p>The aspect of a crowd in a large American city
+differs from that of the passers-by in the street of an
+English town, most of all in the appearance of such
+a large proportion of coloured people. Here it may be
+said, however, that they are colourless, as the prevailing
+hue of the foreign population is that of the Chinaman.
+In Canada the number of negroes, or of persons
+of negro descent, of varying gradations of colour, is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
+remarkable, considering the circumstances, but they
+probably may be accounted for by the emigration in
+the olden times of those who were escaping from
+slavery, or who went with their masters and employers
+into the Dominion. In the cities on the Lakes I was
+very much struck by the persons of undoubted African
+descent who are to be met with in the streets in great
+numbers; and in Chicago there is a quarter nearly
+exclusively occupied by them&mdash;honest, industrious,
+hard-working people seemingly, given to stand about
+at the street corners, however, a good deal on Sundays,
+and cultivating a bright attire, especially on the
+part of the ladies, whose bonnets and shawls were
+things to wonder at. There are loafers amongst them,
+as there are amongst their betters; but, taking them
+all in all, in the Northern, Western, and Atlantic
+States, they are a decidedly useful element in the
+population, easing the burden of labour to the white
+man, and following many occupations, such as those of
+waiters, barbers, bricklayers, and labourers in the less
+skilled sort of work, for which it would be difficult to
+find American substitutes. One peculiarity, which
+may be accounted for by some wiser person than
+myself, seems to be their recklessness as to what
+they put on their heads. Whether it is merely a
+compliance with the custom of the white man, which
+impels them to cover the highly effective protection
+against sun and cold which Nature has given them, or
+not; or whether it is that the canons of taste in such
+matters have not yet settled down to those accepted by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
+people in civilised life in the Western world, the male
+negro has the most extraordinary indifference as to
+the quality and shape of the thing which he calls a
+hat or cap, and it would not be easy to find out of the
+gutters of some Irish country town anything more
+dilapidated, battered, and utterly incoherent than
+some of the hats which one may see on the heads of
+people of colour, especially down South. Whatever
+other virtues they may have, neatness is not amongst
+them; for, with all their affectation of finery, their
+clothes are generally ill-kept, their houses are unkempt,
+and, where they are cultivators of the soil, the
+operations are performed in a slovenly manner. The
+traditions of the old plantation have descended upon
+them, and influence them.</p>
+
+<p>On my way from Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the
+bankers in Montgomery Street&mdash;I believe the former
+of these gentlemen has had the privilege of giving
+his name to steamers and cities, leastways railway
+stations&mdash;I saw a party of sailors belonging to the
+United States steamer "<i>Rodgers</i>," now about to proceed
+in search of the "<i>Jeannette</i>," and I was much
+struck by their resemblance to our own bluejackets
+in general "cut of the jib," dress, face, and figure.
+They were in charge of a smart-looking officer, and
+had been paying a farewell visit to the fruit and
+vegetable markets&mdash;one of the sights of the city.
+They were in high good-humour, laughing and chatting
+loudly, more than is the wont of Americans,
+and I could not but contrast their fine physique with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
+that of the soldiers we had seen at Sir Henry Green's
+parade when General McDowell took us round the
+harbour. The detachment at the Fort, consisting of
+infantry and artillerymen, and squads of different
+regiments, had some weedy veterans in the ranks,
+who had lost their setting up and did not look fit
+for much work; but the sailors, probably a picked
+lot, were good all round.</p>
+
+<p><i>À propos</i> of Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the number
+of wealthy men in San Francisco of Irish origin or
+nationality is remarkable. Millionaires with names of
+Milesian prefixes and terminations are phenomenal.
+We had intended to return to the East Coast by way
+of Utah, and to stay a day or two at Salt Lake City,
+but the railroad company did not consider it expedient
+to give the party the facilities which had been accorded
+in every other instance by the American authorities to
+the Duke and his friends. To have gone round Salt
+Lake City would have cost a couple of hundred pounds
+more for haulage, and we were much more interested
+in seeing Leadville and Denver than the City of the
+Mormons; the game was not thought to be worth
+the candle, and it was resolved that we would go back
+as we came, in charge of the representatives of the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad Company.
+It was only one item more in the long list of things
+we ought to have seen if we could, and I can safely say
+that we had a large share of the common experience of
+travellers in regard to the relations between the possible
+and the impossible in the course of a journey in a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
+strange land, where there are for ever cropping up
+representations that "you really ought not to leave
+without seeing" so and so. The evening of our last day
+was passed in the society of General McDowell, Mr.
+Morgan, the English Consul, Colonel Bee, and others,
+who had done so much to make the visit to San Francisco
+all that could be desired, and whose courtesy
+and kindness will ever be remembered by every one
+of us most gratefully. Like Sir Charles Coldstream,
+we "had seen everything, done everything," but,
+unlike him, had found there was plenty in it. The
+street railway&mdash;most ingenious and successful, invaluable
+in a hilly city like Lisbon&mdash;the Chinese
+Theatre, the Joss houses&mdash;shops, eating-houses, opium
+dens of the Chinese quarter, the clubs, the principal
+buildings, the streets, the shops, the markets, the
+harbour, the suburbs, and country round about&mdash;all
+had been inspected, and yet each day we were told
+that we were doing positive injustice to ourselves
+and to the objects which were perforce neglected.
+In the morning there was a levée in the hotel to
+bid the Duke good-bye and see the party start on
+their return journey. At the very last moment
+a gentleman came forward with a proposal to take
+us to the North Pole by balloon, but there was not
+time to consider it in all its bearings and the offer
+was declined with thanks. We started at 10 <span class="s08">A.M.</span>,
+and the Duke was attended to the boat and to the
+station across the water by a large body of San
+Franciscans, who took leave ere the train started.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
+The gentlemen who were with us on the journey
+westwards attended the Duke on his way towards
+the Eastern States. All day we travelled through
+California&mdash;"the hot furnace"&mdash;which at first, however,
+proved to be only very warm, and the coloured
+servants had constant supplies of iced compounds to
+be drunk for the solace of the homeward bound, and
+had laid in a stock of San Franciscan luxuries to
+soothe the way.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Los Angeles&mdash;Mud-geysers&mdash;"Billy the Kid"&mdash;General Fremont&mdash;Manitou,
+the Garden of the Gods&mdash;Desperadoes&mdash;Bob Ingersoll&mdash;Denver
+City&mdash;Leadville&mdash;Grand Cañon.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>June 12th.</i>&mdash;The train stopped at Los Angeles at six
+in the morning, and, drawing up my window-blind, the
+first person I saw on the platform was our good friend
+Colonel Baker, who had come to meet us, intent on the
+good offices which he could render during our stay.
+These were exhibited in the form of a beautiful bouquet
+for Lady Green, baskets of limes and oranges, and
+great bunches of grapes. In this happy valley there
+are cares as in the rest of the world. The Colonel
+told us he was in the midst of a great litigation
+affecting his claim to a large tract of land in which
+there are said to exist the richest tin-mines in the
+American Continent. Yet why should he care about
+his tin-mine? There were rolling acres rich with
+corn and fruit, and there were flocks and herds and
+vineyards, and a charming home of his own. Nevertheless,
+if the want of that tin-mine made him at all
+unhappy, I am sure those who were indebted to him,
+as we were, for so many kindnesses, will wish his claim
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
+to be triumphantly asserted, and long possession of all
+that is to follow.</p>
+
+<p>I dreaded the passage of the Desert to Yuma; and
+indeed the heat was intense. No wonder that with
+the thermometer ranging from 100° to 104°, all the
+blinds in the car were pulled down, and we sprawled
+listlessly on the cushions. Our excellent attendants
+put forth all the resources of art in the shape of ice
+and preparations of limes and cocktails; but the temperature
+would not be baffled. We could just read,
+and were aware that we were living, and some of us had
+strength enough now and then to execute forays against
+flies with napkins to drive them out of the carriages.
+How could people live out in the open, and work in
+the mines, or pursue any out-of-door employment in
+such torrid heat? Nevertheless, there was a marked
+distinction between it and the heat to be endured with
+the mercury at an equal height in India.</p>
+
+<p>The speed of the train was very respectable&mdash;somewhat
+over twenty miles an hour&mdash;and at that rate
+we ran from San Gorgonio and Banning on to
+Cabazon, through a flat plain, dry and burnt up, very
+like the desert around Suez, and fringed, like it, with
+rocky and rugged hills, save that there was a great
+growth of Spanish bayonets and cactuses of all kinds
+among the stones and sand, and that snow was to be
+seen on all the hill-tops in the distance. For 107
+miles there was no water to be met with going along
+this plain; but the mirage, of which I have spoken in
+the account of our journey to San Francisco, was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
+frequent and beautiful; and again I was fascinated by
+the sight of lovely lakes embowered in trees, with
+stately cities on their shores, changing and shifting
+and melting away, only again to assume apparent
+substance to cheat the senses.</p>
+
+<p>Once the train stopped to allow the passengers to
+visit the mud-geysers, which were not more than
+150 yards on the left of the line, and with commendable
+curiosity most of us got out and walked over
+the baked earth to the spot. There was no mark
+whatever of smoke or vapour to indicate the place;
+and it was almost startling to come suddenly upon a
+kind of pond of semi-liquid mud, fifty or sixty feet
+in diameter, on which huge bubbles, varying in size
+from an orange to a hogshead, were continually forming
+and bursting. There was a faint sulphurous smell,
+and the ground around the liquefied portion of the
+surface, where the bubbles were breaking, was hot and
+cracked. The conductor said that all attempts to
+reach the bottom of the holes through which the
+bubbles arose had failed. Two of these geysers were in
+active operation, and the plain away to the left of the
+rail was said to contain a great number of them. After
+all it was very unsatisfactory to see this ebullition
+going on without being able to account for it; and,
+generally, I think we thought less of each other and of
+our information after visiting them, and finding out
+that not one of us had any theory on the subject which
+would bear either fire or water.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think I ever saw a sunset more beautiful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
+than that which marked the close of this day&mdash;certainly
+not in India or South Africa, nor on the
+prairie, for which they make claims of surpassing
+beauty in the matter of sunsets. As it died out, I
+felt that "thing of beauty" could not "be a joy for
+ever," for it was a combination of colour and of form,
+including sky and mountain, that it would be impossible
+to see again.</p>
+
+<p>The kindness of which we have had so many
+proofs, has followed, accompanied, and preceded us
+all unremittingly and unweariedly. A rough with
+some Bourbon on board mounted to-day the steps
+of the car at a station, and insisted on seeing "this
+Duke." When he was told that the object of his
+attention was engaged, he said, "This is a land of
+liberty (as in his case it was), and he doesn't want a
+bodyguard with him!" But the conductor sent him
+away about his business without trouble. On the
+platform at Benson a few miners asked "the Duke to
+come out and show himself." The people at the stations
+were generally satisfied with a quiet peep; now and
+then an enthusiastic Scotchman claimed a shake hands,
+which was always accorded to him. A sleeper placed
+across the rails (accounted for by the officers on the
+hypothesis that some loafer without a ticket had been
+turned off by the conductor, and had put the sleeper in
+the way of the train to wreak his vengeance&mdash;a thing
+which has occurred nearer home) was the only substantial
+danger to which we were here exposed.</p>
+
+<p>The heat (June 13th) was intense. The thermometer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
+rose to 105 at one o'clock in the day, and it was little
+comfort to us to be told that at Deming it had been up
+to 110 the day before.</p>
+
+<p>For some days we have been supping full of horrors,
+indeed breakfasting and dining on them, for the
+papers contain accounts of the extraordinary homicides
+all about this region. Tucson, Benson, Wilcox&mdash;all
+these places were resounding with the exploits of
+"Billy the Kid." Now at Tucson there is, I believe, a
+man whose name was once amongst the very foremost
+in the United States. Who some twenty years and
+more ago had not heard of General Fremont, "the
+Pathfinder," the adventurous traveller, the energetic
+politician, the dashing soldier? He had gone at the
+outbreak of the war to take up the chief command in
+the west with all the pomp and circumstance of glorious
+war. I was somewhat astonished to find that he was
+at Tucson, the governor of the Territory, on a humble
+salary, apparently the world-forgetting and the world-forgot,
+while "Billy-the-Kid" was perpetrating numberless
+atrocities under his nose, and Mr. Pat Garrett
+was dressing up his loins with his revolver-belt, and
+about to go forth with a chosen band of citizens and
+seek the redoubtable William.<a name="FNanchor_A" id="FNanchor_A" href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
+
+<p>A person who has only seen settled States in
+Europe, or the Eastern States of the North American
+Continent, cannot form any notion of a territory
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
+which has become a centre of attraction to all the
+wild adventurers and daring spirits which society,
+in the process of formation, throws out as a sort of
+advanced guard. In Arizona, in 1870, according to the
+American Almanac, out of a total population of 9658,
+2729 could not write and 2690 could not read. Of the
+total population, 2491 were foreign born, and 2753 were
+natives, the rest being coloured or under ten years of
+age. In New Mexico, out of 91,000 people, 48,000
+over ten years of age could not read, and 51,000 whites
+over ten years of age could not write. It may be
+inferred from such figures what is the general condition
+of the labouring classes in these States and Territories.
+The inhabitants of these States have doubled in the
+last ten years. They are filling up at a rate inconceivably
+great&mdash;so great, indeed, that American newspapers
+are fairly bewildered and American statesmen
+appalled by the rush across the Rocky Mountains
+and down the rivers, although as yet but a small
+proportion of the immense stream of immigrants
+has flooded the outlying territories. "At this rate,"
+exclaims a Western editor, "the old monarchies of
+Europe will soon be depopulated." When Mr. Lincoln,
+in 1861, addressed his inaugural to the expectant States
+he expressed his confident belief that there were children
+then born who would live to see the flag of the Union
+floating over no less than 100,000,000 of human beings.
+The recent census of the United States gives a return
+of 51,000,000 of people, but the most eminent statisticians
+have arrived at the belief that the progress
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
+and increase of the States will not be at the same
+rapid rate as that which marked the history of the
+Republic since the cessation of the great civil war.
+It may be fairly inferred, however, that at the end
+of this century the population of the United States
+will greatly exceed that of Russia, or that of any
+empire except China and Great Britain, including
+Hindostan. The population, on each period of ten
+years, has increased at an average of more than 30
+per cent.; in fact, nearer 33 per cent., and the centre
+of it has travelled westward at the rate of more than
+fifty miles every ten years, till the centre of population
+is now eight miles west by south from Cincinnati.
+In 1800 the Union extended over only 239,935 square
+miles. Its flag now floats over 1,272,239 square miles
+of States and over 1,800,000 square miles of Territory
+governed by the central power at Washington. "We
+cannot think," exclaims a Republican writer, "that
+the war of rebellion settled all our troubles and made
+us secure in our Republic. This enormous growth
+of the practically unknown West reveals to us the
+grave dangers that threaten our nation. We meet
+there the tremendous influences of alien races and alien
+religions." The Americans of New England and of the
+Eastern States do not feel anxious on that score,
+because their institutions are thoroughly founded,
+their character formed, and they trust to the great
+power of accomplished facts to assimilate the alien
+elements and sustain the fabric of the Republic. The
+bugbear of a great Chinese immigration has ceased to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
+practically influence Californian politics, and it may be
+safely assumed that the bulk of the future immigrants
+from the Celestial Empire will only come from the same
+sources as those which have hitherto supplied the stream.
+No wonder, however, that thoughtful Americans&mdash;and
+there are many who think of the future of their country
+as something quite apart from dollars&mdash;are filled with
+grave anxieties when they see such floods of purely
+foreign material, which will in all probability exercise a
+preponderating influence over the politics of the Great
+Republic, surging into the States. Particularly have
+the home missionary clergy, as they are styled, been
+struck by the enormous influence which this foreign
+immigration has exercised. According to one authority,
+the Rev. Mr. Stimson, of Worcester, "it is not a question
+of spreading any particular form of Christianity or
+of Church government, but a momentous struggle of
+American institutions with alien civilisations and religions
+for the control of the great Western country. The
+problem is not a matter of cleaning door-yards, but of
+saving a continent for freedom." The Chinese Question
+and the Indian Question are, they think, as nothing compared
+with the Irish Question and the German Question.
+"The Republic," we are told, "stands on a foundation as
+broad as humanity itself," whatever that may mean,
+"but its condition of existence is a universal regard for
+the interests of all." Often during the course of the
+Duke of Sutherland's excursion it was our good fortune
+to fall in with men of great political and social knowledge.
+The future of the Republic is, in the mind of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
+these men, clouded with uncertainty and doubt. They
+are apprehensive of some unknown danger. It may be
+corruption of political life leading to want of faith in
+free institutions; it may be the rival energies and the
+opposing interests which Washington foresaw as likely
+to array the East against the West&mdash;the Atlantic
+States against the inland States, and it is calculated by
+some sanguine people that before this century is over
+there will be eighteen, or possibly twenty, States
+admitted into the Union formed out of the Territories
+which are now under the central Government at
+Washington. Upon such influences as these alien
+immigration may be expected to act with prodigious
+power. At a recent meeting in Springfield a clergyman
+gave as an illustration of the absolute indifference
+of the foreign immigrants to Republican
+institutions a conversation he had with a Norwegian
+minister in Minneapolis. "There is nothing," said
+this gentleman, "in America which we Norwegians
+regard as of value except your land and your money.
+We do not want to learn English: we do not want to
+know the Americans around us; we have certainly no
+notion of becoming Americans, but we intend to remain
+as we are&mdash;Norwegians." The Mormons control Utah.
+They boast that they will soon govern five of the most
+important territorial regions beyond the Rockies. But
+if Utah becomes a State, as she hopes to do, she will
+found a Mormon code of laws and institutions beyond
+the power of the United States to control. New
+Mexico may be considered as a Roman Catholic State
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
+under the control of an excellent archbishop. Of course
+all prophecies may be falsified by events, but judging
+by the eighty years which have elapsed of the present
+century, and from the ratio of increase in that time in
+the United States, the most liberal construction may be
+placed even upon the bounding estimates of American
+politicians and statists. When we look to the Far West
+and see, for instance, how Winnipeg has become the centre
+of a great network of river navigation, 300 miles in one
+direction, 600 miles in another, and that the Mackenzie
+River passes for 1200 miles through what is declared to
+be the future wheat region of the world, we may easily
+comprehend the anxiety with which the patriotic American
+is filled lest the future of such a State should fall
+into hands antagonistic to the principles in which his
+<i>beau idéal</i> of government has been founded and has
+prospered.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 14.</i>&mdash;At Lamy, a station named after the good
+archbishop of Santa Fé, where we halted for a short
+time whilst the passengers of another train were
+breakfasting, a citizen came up to me on the platform
+and exclaimed, as if he were very much impressed by
+the news he was going to give, "If you look in there,
+sir, you will see Bob Ingersoll at breakfast!" I asked
+whether there was anything very remarkable about
+the fact. "Well, sir," he said, "he is Colonel Ingersoll,
+of whom you have heard. He is the most remarkable
+in-fidel in the United States, and I really think he
+believes what he preaches. A good man to look at,
+too, and, they say, first-rate in his family." I had a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
+glance at the believer in unbelief, and saw a very presentable-looking
+person, of fine appearance and good
+features, busily engaged in making the most of his
+time at one of the tables in the refreshment-room.
+He was the observed of all observers, and appeared to
+like it; and I understood from one of the crowd that
+he had just returned from inspecting some mining
+ventures in which he was concerned; for, if he does
+not believe in the world to come, he is credited with
+very strong faith in the excellencies of the possession
+of wealth in the world that is. His lectures are attended
+by crowded audiences, but, as an astute American
+observed, "they won't come to much, for, after all,
+people who do not believe anything can never get up a
+great enthusiasm. It is in believing something that
+the populace has faith."</p>
+
+<p>Once more our eyes were rejoiced with the sight of
+the lovely plains of Las Vegas, wide-spreading fields
+decked with flowers and dotted with flocks, bordered
+with ranges of softly contoured mountains, the courses
+of the water streams indicated by bright vegetation
+and by growth of trees of many kinds. From Lamy
+(170 miles) there is a gradual rise to Raton, which
+we reached at 6.30 in the evening. The appearance
+of the region we traverse as the train approaches
+the Raton Pass presents a strong contrast to the
+desolate country through which we have been passing.
+From Raton the train was drawn by two engines
+in front and shoved by one behind, and even then
+the pace was not very rapid, for the ascent is very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
+sharp. All the more could we enjoy a very glorious
+sunset, as we slowly ascended the mountain. Then
+darkness came on rapidly, and we slid down towards
+La Junta into the night, and were all fast asleep long
+before we arrived there. In the very early morning, on
+June 15th, some two hours after midnight, we halted
+for a time at Pueblo. At 9 o'clock we had to leave
+our beloved Pullman and change the cars, for we were
+to take a fresh point of departure, starting from the
+Union Depôt upon the Denver and Rio Grande narrow-gauge
+railway for Denver, 119 miles distant, and making
+an excursion on the way to Manitou, to which we
+diverged from Colorado Springs: for to go within reach
+of that famous resort and not to see it would have been
+a great outrage on all the rules and regulations established
+for the observance of travellers. Certes narrow-gauge
+railways need an apology. Their <i>raison
+d'être</i> is, at the best, that they are better than nothing.
+"If you won't have us, you can have nothing else."
+And in such a mountainous region as we were about
+to visit, the difficulties and expense connected with a
+broad-gauge line would have been enormous, if indeed
+it could be constructed at all. The narrow-gauge
+carriages, with seats to match, with which we were
+made acquainted for the first time, were of course
+much less commodious and comfortable than those we
+had quitted, but far superior to those on the Indian
+lines of the same gauge, and Indian engineers had been
+over to take a lesson from the Americans for the use of
+their carriage-builders. Atchison, Topeka, and Santa
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
+Fé Company and Denver and Rio Grande Company
+have been at daggers drawn and pistols cocked&mdash;ay,
+and fired&mdash;and at battles waged, in times gone by;
+and now our friends on the former line were, like ourselves,
+the guests of the latter, which was represented
+by several official gentlemen anxious to do the honours
+to the Duke. The scenery becomes grander and wilder
+every mile as the special hurries on as well as it can
+over the sinuous line, which is piercing a mountain
+region savage and sterile, and climbing by the sides of
+ravines and creeping upwards in rocky valleys with pine-clad
+hill-tops and frowning cliffs above. The engineer
+who designed the line is a Scotchman named McMurtrie&mdash;or
+at least of recent Scotch origin&mdash;and he seems
+to have a special gift for such aspiring work, and a gradient-compelling
+genius not to be baffled by altitudes.
+We were mounting towards the snows. Range upon
+range of whitened summits and hoary ridges came in
+view, all paying homage to the rugged crown of Pike's
+Peak, which can be seen from points more than 140 miles
+away. The fleecy cloudland which seemed to lie before
+us, as we looked away from Pueblo, was resolving itself
+into savage alps. And in these passes, which the eye
+caught for a moment, there might be El Dorados still
+undiscovered, for around us were cities springing out
+of the desert. Here the enchanter's wand is the explorer's
+pick, and no one could say where the precious
+ore might not be awaiting its touch. We were coming
+to the Land of Promises. The conversation of our new
+friends, among whom were some gentlemen of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
+press, related mostly to mines, and one of them had,
+as we discovered, a very certain investment at the disposal
+of the Duke, in the form of a mining-claim, which
+was worth, at the lowest computation, twice as much
+as he was willing to take for it. There was no reason
+to doubt his good faith, but it was felt that it was a
+kind of fortune which ought not to pass into the hands
+of strangers, and should be reserved for the people of
+the country; and I am sure all of the party who had
+the pleasure of the owner's acquaintance hope that
+he has "made his pile" out of it, and has more than
+realised his expectations.</p>
+
+<p>Colorado Springs, forty-five miles from Pueblo, is
+nearly 6000 feet above the level of the sea. The
+character of the line to it is best described in the fact
+that the average grade per mile is 44·14, the maximum
+curvature 6°. There are "no Springs" here, but the
+little town, charmingly situated, is a halting-place much
+frequented in tourist-time by travellers, and reputed to
+be healthful. There are some pleasant houses visible
+from the station, at which we descended to take our
+places in the carriages provided to take us to Manitou
+Springs, five miles away. Mr. Palmer&mdash;if General, I
+beg his pardon&mdash;the President of the Railroad, had
+important business to attend to, but he was so well
+represented by Mr. Bell, the Vice-President, that no
+one regretted his absence, and it cannot be said in his
+case <i>les absents ont toujours tort</i>. He is reported to
+have made a very large fortune with much ingenuity,
+and to have business talents which even in this country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
+excite admiration. Mr. Bell is an Irish gentleman, a
+member of the medical profession, who has a delightful
+villa embowered in a garden in the environs of Manitou,
+where the Duke and his friends found a charming
+interior and an Irish-American welcome, and discovered
+that strawberries and cream were almost as good in
+Colorado as in Covent Garden. A quaint, odd place,
+Manitou&mdash;an American Martigny, with Pike's Peak
+rising (14,300 feet above the sea) over it in the clear
+sky, inspiring regret that we could not make the excursion
+to the summit, which is rewarded, we were told,
+and I can believe, by one of the grandest views in the
+world&mdash;the usual service of guides, horses, and mules,
+and <i>calèches</i>&mdash;a naturalist's store with skins, minerals,
+feathers, and stuffed "objects"&mdash;detached wooden
+houses and villas in small plots of garden&mdash;a straggling
+street, and large hotels for invalids. But there was the
+unusual feature of encampments here and there by the
+roadside, and notices forbidding the pitching of tents
+within certain limits which were explained by the fact
+that the high reputation of the waters and air induces
+people to come from great distances for the treatment
+of consumption, and diseases of throat and lungs.
+Many of them find it cheaper to travel in horse waggons
+and pitch their canvas dwellings when they wish to
+make a halt, than to take up their quarters at hotels.
+Poor people! what pale, hectic cheeks and wasted
+forms we saw; little groups picnicking by the sides of
+the rivulets along the roads&mdash;each with a gnawing
+care&mdash;anxiety about some dear one's health in the midst
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
+of them. Our driver, an intelligent, chatty lad, was
+full of information, and we had to drive the prescribed
+road by the wells out to the Ute Pass, a mountain-gorge
+wild enough&mdash;a small <i>Tête Noire</i>&mdash;to points to
+which magniloquent names have been given.</p>
+
+<p>It is not for want of what is called puffing that
+Americans neglect the resorts of health of their own
+country, and in the States far and wide the beauties
+and advantages of Manitou are blazoned forth on the
+walls of hotels and in guide-books to all who can read.
+I may confess now that, notwithstanding the magnificent
+altitude of Pike's Peak, and the eccentric forms
+of the rocks in the "Garden of the Gods," I was disappointed
+with Manitou. But then the visit was
+short, and the day was hot, and the way was long and
+dusty, and haply it might be that under different
+circumstances Manitou would deserve much warmer
+praise. It possesses indeed an abundance of curious
+springs, said to be full of health-giving properties;
+and in the course of our drive we halted several times
+to partake of drinks from various springs, out of one
+of which bubbled up very good soda-water, precisely
+like Schweppe's best in taste and appearance.
+At the large hotel, which put one in mind of the great
+establishments of the same sort in Switzerland, the
+water served at table to the guests&mdash;a sort of pleasant
+Apollinaris-tasting beverage&mdash;came from a natural
+fountain.</p>
+
+<p>The "cataract" nearly made us angry, and there
+was no regret felt when the carriages returned to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
+hotel, where there was unwonted activity and bustle,
+as the "Denver Zouaves" had just descended in a
+friendly razzia on it, and were desolating the hearts
+and fireside resources of Manitou. The consequences
+might have been serious, as it turned out, to unoffending
+strangers. Those who needed it turned into the barber's
+shop of the hotel to be shaved, and after some delay a
+coloured man appeared, who began to try his hand on
+me. Fortunately it was not 'prentice, for it was very
+unsteady, and I became a little alarmed for my cuticle.
+"It will be all right, mister," quoth the barber. "I
+never cut any one. But I'm demoralised, dat's a fact,
+having to wait on dem Denver Zouaves. Lor a messy
+on any enemy dey has! My nerve's all gone to pieces
+wid their wantin' everting at once at the dinner!"
+The hotel seemed far more clean and comfortable
+than the caravanserais in the land of William Tell;
+but our stay was short, for we were put under
+orders for a sight which has the most inappropriate
+name that could be invented&mdash;a valley in which the
+most extraordinary-looking columns carved out in a
+plateau by the agency of water, have been left standing,
+detached and in groups, to which the visitor
+enters through a cleft in a barrier of rock passing
+round the base of a pillar of sandstone as high as
+a house. The "Garden of the Gods" contains 500
+acres, and is surrounded by mountains and cliffs.
+The sandstone pillars generally taper from the base
+upwards to a short distance from the tops, which are
+flattened out or surmounted by slabs or blocks of sandstone
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
+of fantastic outline, and they are called by names
+derived from fancied likenesses to animals, birds,
+and men. The juxtaposition of the most brilliantly
+hued, dazzling-red blocks and strata, with masses of
+the same material of milky whiteness, gives the impression
+that the scene is the work of human hands;
+it seems too quaint and artificial for the hand of
+Nature, to which alone it is due; and the vegetation
+and the trees are in keeping with the character of the
+place. A trysting-place for geologists, and their happy
+hunting-ground, no doubt. But why "the Garden of
+the Gods," I pray?</p>
+
+<p>From the valley or cup, emerging by another
+road, the driver took us to a ravine-like recess,
+almost girt in by high wooded mountains, in which
+Mr. (General?) Palmer is erecting a mansion of palatial
+importance&mdash;a picturesque site surely&mdash;cliffs,
+forests, and mountain all around, and in view one most
+singular sandstone pillar, named the Major Domo,
+120 feet high and only 30 feet round&mdash;a mountain
+stream brawling through tangled brushwood glades&mdash;a
+garden. But the heat! That must prove a terror
+by day to the inmates of Glen Eyrie Lodge or Castle&mdash;which,
+by the by, was named, as one of us insisted,
+from a collection of rubbish on a ledge in the face of
+one of the cliffs, which was, he maintained, the nest of
+an eagle. It was now time to return to our train,
+and we were not sorry to get back to Colorado Springs.</p>
+
+<p>From Colorado Springs to our destination at Denver
+there were still 75 miles of rail, and the line continued
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
+to ascend till we reached Divide (7186 feet),
+whence there was a gentle descent. There were sixteen
+stations named on the time-table. We stopped
+at very few of them, and travelled somewhat too fast
+to permit our placid enjoyment of the scenery, austere
+and vast, which indeed deserved more attention than
+could be given to it by passengers in a very lively
+train&mdash;endless alps on alps, not sheeted with perpetual
+white, but rather flecked with snowfields, which contrasted
+finely with the sombre pine-forests, and the
+rich hues of the rocks, touched by the rays of the
+setting sun, that, ere it slid behind the mountains,
+cast a rose-coloured mantle on their summit. The
+evidences of a bustling city were not wanting in the
+approaches to the capital of Colorado. There were
+tall chimneys vomiting out smoke in the distance, and
+near at hand trains of waggons were toiling over the
+dusty plain&mdash;still 5000 feet above the sea-level&mdash;fast
+trotters and people on horseback, beer-gardens, factories
+of all kinds, brick-kilns, and then a fringe of
+log houses and wooden shanties, before the train
+stopped at the imposing and substantial depot.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quarter-past eight, nearly dark, when
+we reached Denver, and glad were we to get into
+the hall of the Windsor Hotel, which was crowded
+with a mixed multitude&mdash;miners, and speculators, and
+traders, and some travellers like ourselves&mdash;a very busy
+scene indeed. In the hotel were all human comforts
+nearly; hot and cold baths, and good rooms, and more
+appliances of civilised existence, for those who could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
+pay for them, than could be found in many hostelries
+of approved reputation in venerable towns at home;
+moreover, exuberant offers of help and information.
+One goes to bed laden with obligations and heavy with
+the sense of favours which can never be repaid. There
+was now a <i>soupçon</i> of frost in the air, and notwithstanding
+the heat which we had endured the greater
+part of the day, fires were not ungrateful; and as
+we peered out of our windows over the roofs of the
+wide-spread houses of the town, we could see the
+snow on the lofty ranges of hills, watered by the South
+Platte River and Cherry Creek, which surround the
+cup in which Denver has been built in obedience to
+the impulses of the increasing population, which now
+numbers, I believe, 38,000 souls. There was a bright
+glare from the gas-lighted streets, sounds of music, and
+a tumult of life in the town which would have been
+creditable to an ancient metropolis. In the morning
+from the hotel windows appeared a beautiful and widespread
+panorama of the hills we had seen the evening
+before, peak above peak, none very densely covered
+perhaps, or presenting continuous snowfields, but
+extending in billowy sweeps far away to the horizon,
+all capped with snow, now bathed in a flood of fervent
+sunshine, the snow lighted up by the peculiar
+crimson tints common in Alpine regions. There
+were duties in the way of sight-seeing and exploration
+of no ordinary nature to be done. First there were
+interviews and receptions, and the inevitable drive
+through the place as soon as the ordeal of breakfast
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
+was over; and ordeal in some sort it was for the
+strangers to file in to the public room and take their
+places at their table, aware that the morning papers
+had subjected them to exhaustive criticism, which was
+being verified by those around us. The morning papers
+too had given some topics for reflection, indications
+that in the newly created capital of Colorado desperate
+men, overtaken by the march of law and order, had
+refused to accept service, and were vindicating their
+rights as wild western outcasts to take or part with
+life as of yore, in reckless encounters and deliberate
+assassinations. There were, perhaps, at that moment
+some hundreds, if not thousands, out of the population
+of 37,000 or 38,000 of the city, who belonged to the
+adventurous classes&mdash;sporting-men, betting-men, ring-men,
+bar-keepers, hell-proprietors, and their satellites,
+and the scum of the saloons attracted from the great
+cities of the States for hundreds of miles, by the
+prey which miners with belts full of gold, half mad
+with drink, and always fond of excitement, frequently
+are; and if to these be added the dissolute loafers
+and broken-down mining speculators, the strength
+of the army arrayed against the law may be estimated;
+and the wonder is that among a population armed
+to the teeth there are not more cases of such violent
+deeds as we were reading of at breakfast. To the
+stranger there was no evidence of the existence of
+these disturbing elements, unless the bearded and
+booted men with speculation in their eyes, in the hotel
+passages and halls, belonged to the dangerous, as they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
+certainly did to the mining, classes. As to the resources
+of the city, although for rapidity of growth
+its wonders may be eclipsed by those of Leadville,
+Denver claims a very high place in the catalogue
+of these marvellous fungi of civilisation, of which
+the Western States present almost unique examples.
+There is everything that any one can want to be had
+for money in the place, and much more than most people
+need. Paris fashions and millinery are in vogue.
+There are fine shops, handsome churches, a theatre,
+breweries, factories, banks, insurance offices.</p>
+
+<p>The principal street exhibits pretty young people,
+who would have no occasion to fear comparison with
+the <i>beau monde</i> in Eastern or European capitals. The
+thoroughfares are crowded with vehicles, and spruce
+carriages and well turned-out horses may be seen in
+the favourite drive, that has been made over an
+indifferent road to the base of the Rocky Mountains,
+which appear to be close at hand, though they are
+thirteen miles away. But here and there in the well-dressed
+crowd may be seen a Bohemian <i>pur sang</i>, or a
+miner in his every day clothes, bent on a rig out and
+a good time of it. The streets, unpaved, dusty, and
+rugged, are very wide, and bordered with trees, and
+the houses generally are built of good red brick
+instead of wood; and there are runnels of water like
+those one sees in Pretoria and other Dutch towns in
+South Africa. The roads about the city leave much
+to be desired; but Rome was not built in a day.</p>
+
+<p>There are many ready-made clothing establishments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
+in the main streets, and there is a heavy trade in
+tinned provisions. Through the Western States, as in
+South Africa, the débris of provision-tins constitutes
+a certain and considerable addition to the objects to be
+seen in the vicinity of every house, and to the mounds
+of rubbish in the street of every village. How indeed
+could the first-comers in such regions keep body and
+soul together without the supplies in such a portable
+form of the first necessaries of life? Having once run
+up a town in these remote wastes, the inhabitants are
+still compelled to make a liberal use of the same sort
+of food, and mines of tinned iron gradually accumulate
+around them.</p>
+
+<p>Our first excursion was to the Argo Works, under
+very pleasant auspices, for we had the wife of the Senator,
+who is one of the principal partners, and Mrs. Pearce,
+whose husband is largely interested in the works, taking
+charge of us. The works are at some distance outside
+the town, but the lofty chimneys vomit out quite sufficient
+vaporous fumes and smoke to blight the vegetation
+and to give the people near at hand a taste of their
+quality. I am not going to give a minute description,
+for more reasons than one, of what we saw at the
+works; but it was a very interesting exhibition of the
+processes by which the precious metals are extracted
+from the ores and delivered to commerce. The Argo
+Works simply assay and reduce ores on commission,
+but the business is on a very large scale. Immense
+piles, in fact small mountains, of brown, cinnamon and
+earth coloured dust and rock were heaped up in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
+sheds, to be brought to the furnaces and turned, when
+divested of the lead, iron, copper, and gold, out in
+ingots of silver. All the methods for the extraction
+of silver were shown to us, but I committed a gross
+indiscretion when I asked, in my ignorance, "How
+do you extract the gold?" "That," said the urbane
+gentleman who was conducting us over the works,
+"we never permit strangers to see." So there is more
+there than meets the eye.</p>
+
+<p>The business of assaying here must be profitable, and
+if the reputation of any firm be once established there
+is a secure fortune for its members. The miners flock
+to them, and they can dictate terms. The extent of
+mining work in the country around may be inferred
+from the numerous offices in connection with it in the
+city. As a specimen of what Messrs. Bush and Tabor
+of our hotel give their guests for dinner, let me offer
+you this <i>menu</i> of the 5.30 ordinary to-day (June 16).
+Soup, beef à l'Anglaise; fish, boiled trout, anchovy
+sauce; corned beef, leg of mutton, sirloin beef, chickens
+with giblet sauce, fricassee à la Toulouse, veal, kidneys
+sautés aux croûtons, rice, croquettes, baked pork and
+beans, saddle of antelope, currant jelly, lamb, tongue,
+chicken salad, spiced salmon; innumerable "relishes"
+and vegetables, baked rice pudding, strawberry pie,
+apricot pie, jelly, blancmange, vanilla ice cream,
+macaroons, pound cake, fruit, Swiss cheese, nuts, coffee,
+&amp;c. The wines were not cheap: champagne 16<i>s.</i> a
+bottle, St. Julien 6<i>s.</i>, Leoville 14<i>s.</i>, sherry 8<i>s.</i>, brandy
+14<i>s.</i> per bottle. Orders for "drinks" at the bar after
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
+dinner were much more general than orders for wine
+at dinner.</p>
+
+<p>Denver, in spite of its mineral wealth, is very poor,
+however, in that of which the want would make life,
+even in America, intolerable. The supply of drinking-water
+is scanty and bad, and last year there was nearly
+a water famine. The <i>cartes</i> in the hotel announced
+"Water used in this room is boiled and filtered." But
+great efforts have been made to furnish the inhabitants
+with a store, constant and adequate, of the precious
+fluid, and we saw very considerable works, the property
+of an Irish gentleman, erected before the town attained
+its present dimensions, which were to be supplemented
+by a new enterprise respecting which we
+heard much. Perhaps no town of equal size in an equal
+length of time has ever had so much money and money's
+worth flowing in and through it as Denver since the
+Colorado mines were worked. It is asserted that the
+trade of the town for 1881 will exceed 8,000,000<i>l.</i>
+Colorado in 1879 yielded ores to the value of more
+than 3,750,000<i>l.</i> The output in the present year will
+exceed that of 1880. In that year $35,417,517 worth of
+gold and $20,183,889 of silver (more than 11,000,000<i>l.</i>)
+was deposited in the United States Mint and Assay
+Office. There is, besides, vast wealth in flocks and
+herds, and Denver is the place where the people resort
+from Colorado for purposes of trade and pleasure;
+altogether an astounding place, with a future quite
+dazzling to think of, unless the mines give in, and even
+then Colorado cannot again be poor; its climate and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
+scenery will always attract travellers, and its capacity
+for feeding sheep and cattle will secure its population.
+"And as to the beetle?" Why, no one would have
+anything to say to it. Nothing was known of it.
+There might be such things in other States. "And
+the name?" Probably it was a red-coloured bug, and
+got the name Colorado just as the river, or tobacco,
+was called, from the hue of it. At all events the bug
+did not belong to the State.</p>
+
+<p>The interest which the progress of Colorado and the
+condition of society in the State excite was exemplified
+by the appearance in Denver of a party of Hungarian
+noblemen, whose names gave occasion for stumbling to
+the journalists who copied them out of the Hotel Register&mdash;Count
+Andrassy and others, who were travelling
+under the guidance of Dr. Rudolf Meyer, of Vienna.
+Although the air of Denver is so much bepraised,
+it happens that most of our party felt rather overcome
+at the end of our excursion through the town
+and the visit to the smelting works, and one of
+the Hungarians was confined to his room. However,
+they sallied out before dinner, and a gloomy
+prophet of evil remarked, "If these strangers should
+have a difficulty, I consider they'll hev only theirselves
+to blame. Some citizens don't like strangers
+comin' in and starin' at them, and they're apt to be
+awkward in their tempers in the afternoon." Knowing
+no danger, and fearing none, they went off, and were a
+long time absent. Meantime we were preparing for
+the road, as we were bound for Leadville, the city of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>
+the "biggest boom" of mining times&mdash;"the Silver El
+Dorado," as the guide-book, with a magnificent "bull,"
+describes it. Our Hungarian friends returned to the
+hotel ere we left. They were filled with enthusiasm,
+and with a good deal also of curiosity in regard to the
+shootings of which they had heard so much, and were
+following in our track next day, and so we parted <i>sans
+adieux</i>. How the love of gold has filled these lone
+valleys with desperate men! "They are a rough lot,
+sure enough," said the landlord, "but lynching keeps
+them down; and it is much better than hanging according
+to law, to my mind. It certainly is cheaper."
+"How is it cheaper?" "Why," said he, "when a
+man is prosecuted, or when he is tried before the
+judges, the law expenses are heavy, and they fall on
+the county. When a man is lynched there is only the
+expense of the rope, and a little loss of time for the boys
+who do the job." From Denver to Pueblo and from
+Pueblo to Leadville the line is on the narrow-gauge
+principle, and our train, which left at seven o'clock in
+the evening, seemed to be driven on no principle at all;
+for, anxious to astonish a Duke perhaps, or Britishers
+generally, the driver did what certainly could not be
+called his level best to send us along up and down
+a very rough line, and round the sharpest curves, at
+the rate of forty miles an hour, so that when we
+turned in, our rest, if rest at all it were, was exceedingly
+broken, and we trundled about in our
+berths as if we were in a ship in a pretty heavy
+sea. Still this narrow-gauge was the only line which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
+could be made through such a country as we were
+traversing. Peeps out of the window ever and anon
+revealed, high up amongst the stars, rugged mountain-tops,
+and for ever there came the sound of rushing
+water, near or remote, as the train "bounded" on its
+course. I do not know what stations we passed on
+our way, but the night was very long, and I greeted
+with pleasure the first gleam of light above the hill-tops.
+The Arkansas River was on our left, and at
+dawn we had glimpses of its turbid stream running
+madly in deep gorges far below us. At the South
+Arkansas station the train halted soon after daybreak,
+and then we diverged from the main line, and a light
+train took us over the Arkansas River by a fine bridge
+on its way up the Gunnison Extension to visit the
+highest mountain-pass traversed by a railway in the
+world. South Arkansas station is 217 miles from
+Denver, and is 6944 feet&mdash;and Marshall Pass (25 miles
+away), to which we were bound, is 10,760 feet&mdash;above
+sea-level. There were grades of 211 and curves of 24°
+on the way, and the railroad twisted in and out among
+the ravines like an iron Alexandrine, for ever ascending
+till we had passed the limits of forest life. There were
+stations at short intervals&mdash;Poncha Springs, Mears,
+Silver Creek&mdash;from each other. From the stations
+there is a good deal of cross-country traffic, and at one
+place we saw three stages laden with men and women&mdash;or
+rather, to be polite and accurate, let me say with
+women and ladies&mdash;starting, one with six horses, and
+the other two with four each. These were bound for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
+Gunnison, and as we were halting for a little, the Duke
+and some others got out of the train, and sauntered up
+towards the wooden shanties which formed "the town,"
+consisting of the usual array of saloons and drinking
+places. However, our course was cut short by the
+information vouchsafed by one of the officials, that it
+might be as well not to go up, as there had been
+a big shooting match that morning, and that one
+man was killed and four had been wounded, "and
+some of them were on the drink yet." From 4.30 <span class="s08">A.M.</span>
+to 6.45 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> we struggled up towards the pass till
+the line came to an end near the summit, and we
+were rewarded by some very fine views, exceedingly
+like those of the Mont Cenis Railway or the Sömmering.
+The hills on both sides of the line were
+stippled and flaked with snow, but there was no extensive
+field, so far as the eye could see, nor was there
+any appearance whatever of a glacier, the tops generally
+being clear of snow, which only lodged in the
+ravines and hollows. Strange it was in these alpine
+heights to hear the clang of Italian tongues; but most
+of the navvies were from Italy, and if not quite so
+strong as English or Americans, they were in more
+favour with contractors, because they did more work,
+owing to their steadiness and sobriety. The line was
+being pushed on at an astonishing rate, and one man
+was pointed out to us who had laid four and a half
+miles of railway in one day, "the biggest thing of the
+kind ever done." Our enjoyment of the scenery was
+very much diminished by our animal appetites, stimulated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
+by the sharp mountain air, which craved incessantly
+for food. But not even a cup of coffee was
+to be had until we got back to the South Arkansas
+station, late in the morning, where an excellent breakfast
+awaited us. Here we were detained some time by
+a derailment of an engine in front.</p>
+
+<p>From South Arkansas station to Leadville (61 miles)
+the railroad is still more aspiring. The higher we
+ascend the less striking are the scenic effects, but the
+grades are not very severe till we come to Malta,
+where it reaches 130; from Hilliers to Leadville the
+maximum is 176, the curves being often 15°. The
+general character of the country may be conceived
+from these figures, but no words can convey any idea
+of the wholesale destruction of timber which has marked
+the progress of the explorers and prospectors. Where
+the axe was weary the blaze and the fire were called in,
+and hundreds of miles of forest are laid in blackened
+ruin. At last we are on a level with the hill-tops.
+There, on the hill-tops and in the valleys of a sterile
+region in front of you, amidst those tall chimneys
+vomiting out smoke and steam, is a wilderness of
+wooden huts, "the Great Carbonate Camp"&mdash;where we
+leave the train&mdash;spread out over an undulating plateau,
+broken into mound-like hills and sharp hillocks&mdash;bustling
+streets filled with the most remarkable swarm
+of all nations that ever settled on any one spot in
+the world. The story of Leadville reads like a
+chapter out of some book of Oriental fable. It is a
+huge barrack of wooden houses, with some solid and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
+important buildings, with masses of tree-stumps cropping
+up in the centre of the main thoroughfares,
+pitched over an undulating, rugged, dusty ledge. In
+the midst of blocks of houses sprout up the chimneys
+of furnaces and mining works, the clang of machinery
+fills the air, which is thick with clouds of dust. It was
+a few years ago an utterly wild, lifeless waste amidst
+the mountains covered with forests, when three
+brothers, named Gallagher, exploring from California,
+were led by some genius, good or bad, to test the
+material of the rocks in the ravine. They struck gold
+ore, and silver too, and they set up a claim; and
+presently they sold their shares in the land which they
+had appropriated, for 40,000<i>l.</i>, which they divided.
+Two used their wealth wisely, and made more of it,
+and, taking to themselves the members of the family,
+throve exceedingly; one, not so wise, if he were quite
+as good, did not prosper as well as his brothers. But
+the scene of their operations was soon swarming with
+enterprising miners. There was a mighty "boom."
+Now there is a city! Leadville is, I think, the most
+astonishing city on earth, but I am not by any means
+inclined to say that it is a place I should like to be
+astonished about for more than a few hours.</p>
+
+<p>The party drove to the Morning Star, said to be
+the best mine in Leadville; and the Duke, Lady Green,
+Sir Henry Green, and others, went down the mine
+in miners' clothes or cloaks. Two others, whose names
+I shall not give, remained above, and had, I fancy,
+the best of the time. Afterwards we visited Grant's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
+Smelting Works, and then back to the Clarence Hotel
+and dined, strolling out afterwards through the town
+and visiting the billiard saloons, the Grand Central
+Theatre, and finally, where we were told Leadville life
+was to be seen in all its glory, the faro and the kino
+tables, which, however, were doing but very little
+business, as it was not until after midnight that play
+in the town generally commenced. Instead of sleeping
+at the hotel, we resolved to take refuge in the train,
+which was drawn up at the siding; and we had to
+drive in order to reach it, as it was considered unsafe
+to walk through the streets in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>We started at four o'clock next morning, June 18th,
+and on arriving at Arkansas Station learned that an
+engine was off the line in front of us. Breakdown gangs
+were sent for, and all the locomotive talent amongst
+our passengers repaired quickly to the scene. As it
+was not easy to lift the engine, the engineers adopted
+the expedient of laying a temporary rail to turn its
+flank so as to enable us to pass round it, which we
+did after a delay of about an hour. The Duke got
+out and sat on the cow-catcher by way of a change.
+But the interest we took in the scenery was somewhat
+diminished by the intelligence that the delay
+caused by the engine would prevent our enjoying the
+"soda bath" we had been promised at Cañon City, and
+the sight of the State Prison, where murderers were
+to be paraded by the dozen. About twenty miles
+north of the Grand Cañon, the gorges through which
+the river runs became wider and deeper. All that has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
+been written about the Grand Cañon utterly fails to
+convey an adequate idea of its exceeding grandeur and
+wildness. The rocks&mdash;closing in so that the spectator
+in the car, looking forward, thinks the progress of the
+train must be arrested, and that it is not possible for
+it to get out of the <i>cul de sac</i> which appears in front,
+rising aloft for upwards of two thousand five hundred
+feet on each side&mdash;are coloured with the brightest
+hues, and present an infinite variety of form. The
+impetuous current of the Arkansas River, contracted at
+times to the breadth of some twenty or thirty yards, and
+penned into a space in which the waters boil and toss
+as if about to leap on and submerge the passing cars,
+roars wildly down below on our right at a depth varying
+as the line rises and falls. But it is at the Bridge&mdash;a
+triumph of engineering skill&mdash;that the horrors of the
+pass culminate. The sides of the ravine approach so near
+that the daring engineer was enabled to execute the idea
+of lowering from above a <img src="images/triangle.jpg" width="15" height="18" alt="Triangle" />-shaped frame or trestle of
+iron; and, the ends catching on each side of the
+gorge, permitted him to work on it for the construction
+of the iron platform over which the train is
+carried at a height of some hundreds of feet right
+over the maddened river. You can look down through
+the interstices of the girders and glance shudderingly
+at the hell of waters below&mdash;a sight and sensation
+never to be forgotten. The ravine gradually expands
+and the cliffs recede as the line strikes eastwards; and
+though the scenery retains a wild and savage character
+for many miles farther, the impressions of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
+Grand Cañon caused us to regard it with comparative
+indifference. We heard many tales of the great railway
+war which was waged for the possession of the
+pass, of which traces still remained in the ruins of
+posts of vantage and observation, and the works of the
+defeated railroad visible on the other side of the ravine.
+At night we reached Pueblo and took up our quarters
+in our own cars, and continued our journey, after some
+delay, towards Kansas City.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.<br />
+KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Liquor Law&mdash;Kansas Academy of Science&mdash;An Incident of Travel&mdash;A
+Parting Symposium&mdash;Life in the Cars&mdash;St. Louis to New
+York.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>June 19th.</i>&mdash;Still on the rolling prairies; in the
+country of compulsory abstinence&mdash;the paradise of Sir
+Wilfred Lawson. At 9.30 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> the train stopped at
+Newton, 431 miles from Pueblo, and 281 from Kansas.</p>
+
+<p>Here a phenomenon&mdash;there was a man by the road side
+who walked with unsteady step, whose legs
+tottered, and who lurched violently as he came down
+the road at that early hour. "He is a sick man,"
+observed one of my friends in the train; "that gentleman
+has been taking <i>medicine</i>." In the Kansas Act
+there is a clause enabling physicians, in case of need,
+to order stimulants for the patients without penalty;
+but I am told the doctors have generally refused to act
+upon that permission, so I suppose our friend had been
+consulting an unlicensed practitioner.</p>
+
+<p>It would be ill done, when I am anxious to acknowledge
+the pleasure and profit which I derived from my
+passage through the State, if I did not record the
+satisfaction with which I perused a volume of the
+"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science,"
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>
+which by accident I picked up at one of the stations.
+The very name speaks trumpet-tongued for the progress
+which has been made in this wild region. The year
+before last, the twelfth annual meeting of the Academy
+was held in Topeka, and I find amongst the list of papers
+read such subjects as these:&mdash;The Kansas Lepidoptera;
+Kansas Minerals; the Mounds of Southern Kansas;
+Recent additions to Kansas Plants; Kansas Botany;
+Kansas Meteorites; Phonetic representations of Indian
+Language; Sinkholes; Elementary Sounds of Language;
+Mound-builders; On Recent Indian Discoveries.
+And among the lecturers there was Professor
+B. F. Mudge, who died last year, whose name probably
+is known to a very limited number of scientific
+men outside the University of Kansas. Generally the
+papers contributed by the gentlemen of the State attest
+industry and attainments which make their praise of
+the Professor particularly valuable. It is curious
+enough to pick up in a railway carriage, traversing
+such a scene of comparative wildness and vast uninhabited
+plains in Western Kansas, an exceedingly
+interesting examination of the Helmholtz theories of
+sight. The object of the lecturer would scarcely be
+suspected by the reader. We had already been struck
+by the extraordinary absence of signalmen, or of any
+of the complex apparatus of men and machinery which
+may be seen in Europe, and notably in England, to
+report the progress of trains on the lines. Collisions,
+however, occur in America where these precautions are
+not taken, and the lecturer attributed a good deal of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>
+these accidents to colour-blindness, which appears to
+have attracted considerable attention in the United
+States. Surgeons, pilots, &amp;c., are tested for colour,
+and in the army colour-blindness disqualifies the recruit
+for employment in the signal corps. Altogether
+the papers give an impression that in this new State
+there are diligent students of natural history and
+physics, and profound inquirers into all the phenomena
+of life. There was a reverse to the medal.</p>
+
+<p>At a station where the train halted beyond Pueblo,
+a card was handed to me by one of the stewards. "The
+gentleman is, as he seemed very pressing, outside; but
+I told him you were engaged." I started as I read the
+name and address on the card, as well I might. They
+indicated that an old friend whom I had left in a condition
+of great bodily weakness and infirmity in London,
+was close at hand in this remote region&mdash;a wonderful
+if welcome fly in amber. I ran out of the drawing-room
+into the next car, and there saw a man, agitated and
+travel-worn, whom I had never, to the best of my belief,
+seen in my life before. His story was told, if not soon,
+at least in time to let me partly understand the situation
+ere the train moved off. The stranger had been in the
+service of the gentleman whose card he sent in to me,
+but had left it to better himself in America, and had
+gone out as valet to an American of good position at
+Colorado Springs. He found, however, according to his
+own account, that he was expected to do things not
+required of a valet in his own country, such as lumbering,
+wood-cutting, and the like, and so he had thrown up
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>
+his situation and was going back to England. He had
+had quite enough of Colorado Springs. "I was not
+there above a month, and I was shot at twice," he said.
+"Once because I made some remark in a bar-room,
+where a chap was abusing Englishmen; and another
+time while I was speaking in the street to a man a
+fellow had a grudge against. He fired at him across
+the road, and the ball whistled within a hair's-breadth
+of my head." He had arrived at Pueblo some time
+before our special, and as the morning was warm,
+he walked into a bar near the platform, while the
+engine of his train was watering, to get a glass of
+lemonade. As he was drinking it, a man walked in
+and called for a glass of whisky, putting down, at
+the same time, what seemed to be a bank note, on the
+counter. The boniface said, "I haven't got change
+for this twenty-dollar bill&mdash;perhaps this gentleman
+can oblige you." The unsuspecting Briton, who had
+put the money for his passage to Liverpool in a purse,
+drew it out to change the note, and the strange
+customer at once seized it from his hand, and rushed
+off towards the street with his booty. The Britisher
+ran after him, but checked his wild career when he
+saw, within an inch of his head, the muzzle of a revolver
+which the robber had drawn, and the fellow
+vanished. "Won't you help me to stop the thief; you
+see what has happened?" exclaimed the victim turning
+to the barman. "I guess there was no money in that
+purse, sir. And if there was, perhaps you had no
+more right to it than he had." Then the Briton
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>
+dashed off after Don Guzman, shouting "police," and
+was at once accosted by an officer of the Pueblo force.
+He hurriedly stated the facts. The policeman smiled.
+"I think you won't see that pile agin," he remarked;
+"and if you don't look sharp ye'll miss yer train, that's
+a fact!" The man had his railway ticket all right, a
+few dollars in his pocket, and I told him I would see
+him and get him a passage, if I found on inquiry his
+story was true. My companions thought the tale suspicious&mdash;but
+I believe it was true, and I subsequently
+franked the man to England.</p>
+
+<p>Now here we had an exemplification of the manners
+and customs of the district. Such an act of violence
+and robbery might occur in London&mdash;anywhere. But
+what of the apathy, or perhaps complicity, of the bar man?
+And if it or they be considered not altogether
+abnormal, is the conduct of the policeman to be accepted
+as quite consistent with the discharge of a
+policeman's duty? Well, whilst I was pondering on
+these things, there came to me the best possible adviser&mdash;a
+judge in this Israel&mdash;our excellent Palinurus,
+Mr. White. He threw a new, if not a side light on the
+subject. "Depend on it he is a confidence man. The
+trains are full of them! Our conductors have express
+orders about the rascals." And he explained that a
+confidence man is a swindler&mdash;very often an Englishman,
+who makes it his business to look out for unwary
+strangers, on whom he imposes with some tale of distress,
+or some recital of imaginary misfortune and
+adventure. As the man I had seen was coming on in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>
+the train in our wake, Mr. White promised to talk
+with the conductor, and find out, if he could, the truth
+about the Pueblo robbery. Before dusk a telegram
+was forwarded by him to me from the station where he
+left us, to say that the conductor had no doubt the
+man was robbed, but that it was partly his own fault,
+and to warn me to be cautious in my dealings with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>We have now been travelling straight on end for
+1160 miles, with only two engineers and two firemen
+and one engine, a feat of endurance which has greatly
+exercised the Duke of Sutherland, who, as a practical
+director of the London and North-Western Railway,
+has knowledge of such matters, and who contrasts the
+performance with the experience he has on the home
+lines, where engines, engineers, and firemen would
+have been relieved or laid up over and over again.
+The head engineer of the line, who joined us, Mr.
+Hackney, formerly of Congleton, had become accustomed
+to these journeyings and endurances, which
+were brought to the front in our conversation by the
+engine-driver appearing at the door of the carriage to
+claim a dollar which he had won from the Duke in a
+bet that he could not do the distance without laying
+up the engine for repairs.</p>
+
+<p>All the long Sabbath-day we travelled on through
+the prairie, catching glimpses now and then of wooden
+villages, around which trees were beginning to sprout
+up, and of the little churches with knots of carts,
+waggons, horses, and buggies outside, and people waiting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>
+for the end of the sermon. Now and then, perhaps
+at intervals of fifteen miles or so, are places of larger
+importance, such as Emporia, a rising city on the plains,
+where many steeples pointed aloft indicated considerable
+diversity of creed. An authority, not always to
+be relied upon, stated that there are fourteen churches
+belonging to the town.</p>
+
+<p>There was a parting symposium in the second
+Pullman ere we reached Topeka. Mr. White, Major
+Anderson, General Brown, Mr. Jerome, and my much
+wandering compatriot, a veritable Irish Ulysses, raised
+the tuneful melodies of the "Golden Slipper," the
+"Little Brown Jug," and the other tender psalmodies
+which had whiled away so many hours, for the last time
+in our society, and the little gages which were but the
+outward and visible signs of the regard we felt for our
+friends were exchanged with honest effusion. There
+may be&mdash;nay, there are&mdash;many jealousies and causes of
+estrangement between the people of the Old Country
+and of the New, but between the individuals of both
+there is a <i>camaraderie</i> which cannot, I believe, be found
+between Englishmen and the natives of any country
+except America.</p>
+
+<p>"Good bye! God bless you! Be sure if ever you
+come to England you shall have a hearty welcome from
+me." "And from me!" "And me!" "And me!"
+The engine bell tolled, and we moved slowly on.</p>
+
+<p>And we were left all alone! The pleasant companions
+of so many weeks had gone! I wonder if they
+missed us as much as we missed them?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While travelling across the Rockies and the desert to
+San Francisco and back, our course of life was pretty uniform,
+and one day followed another with almost perfect
+resemblance in the mode of existence and in all things
+except the scenery and the country through which we
+were passing. First, in the early morning came one
+of the attendants to our bedside with a cup of coffee,
+and then the curtains of the little cubicle were thrown
+aside and you looked out on either plain, or mountain,
+or river, or col; and on the faces of early risers at doors
+or windows as the train passed through some rising
+town. At one end of the saloon there was a bath-room,
+and from the tank there was always to be obtained
+sufficient water for the purpose of an early dip, which
+was enjoyed as occasion offered in turn by the party.
+Then a cigarette. Then we dropped in as people do at
+a country house, into the sitting-room, and exchanged
+ideas as to the progress made during the night, and the
+stoppages, wondered where we were, and had a little
+conversation with the conductor or Arthur as to the
+place where we could stop or get the papers&mdash;and so
+got over the morning till 9 o'clock, when breakfast was
+announced, consisting of fish, poultry, meat, fruit (I
+had nearly said flowers, for there was always a bouquet
+on the table), tea, coffee, and cold dishes, with abundance
+of milk and butter. Where the fish came from and how
+they were kept fresh was matter of wonder, for the instances
+were very rare in which there was any indication
+that it had not quite recently come out of the sea or the
+river. The supply of ice was liberal and unfailing,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span>
+and whenever we stopped at any considerable station
+the whole disposable strength of the attendants in the
+train was employed in grappling with large blocks of
+it and stowing it away in the ice reservoir, in which
+were the larder and the cellar for such wines as needed
+cooling, and for the vegetables and meat, of which there
+were great stores constantly laid in. Then after
+breakfast there was reading or sight-seeing, investigating
+the line, examining the maps, receiving visits
+and returning them in other parts of the train, till in
+the very hot days it was necessary, after expelling the
+flies, which were troublesome on occasion, to draw the
+dust-blinds and the curtains of the carriages, to mitigate
+the fierceness of the sun. It was objected occasionally
+that by this process we deprived ourselves of the opportunity
+of what was called "seeing the country," but
+after all a glance now and then is quite sufficient to
+reveal the general character of the districts through
+which the train is running; and the most diligent and
+painstaking observer cannot keep his eyes fixed steadily
+for a day on the external aspects of the region through
+which he is travelling. I should be sorry to declare
+that every one was wide awake all the time of the forenoon
+and up to the period of lunch, which too often
+exceeded on the side of many dishes, being, in fact, a
+mid-day dinner; but then no one was obliged to eat
+more than he liked, or drink either. Then came
+the longest stretch of the day, and at its close
+another banquet; and as the sun declined and the
+temperature decreased, we could take more pleasure in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span>
+looking out at the fantastic forms of the vegetation
+which clothed the arid rocks in the desert, or on the
+bright green prairie, or on the towering mountains,
+waiting till the sun had set, generally in a blaze of
+glory. There were, of course, interruptions and variations
+as we halted at the more important places;
+disappointments about letters which had been telegraphed
+for and which were expected day after day,
+constituted also a matter of conversation and discourse.
+There was an harmonium in the sitting-room of the
+palace car, but no one had the art of playing it,
+although we had plenty of music of another sort; for
+after dinner the gentlemen of the railroad party who
+had not dined with us came in, and we were never
+tired of listening to the songs, so original and amusing,
+which they gave with great spirit and admirable
+time and tune, for it happened they all possessed good
+voices, and the melodies with which the troops of
+coloured minstrels have now rendered the world
+familiar were then new to us.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of our tour the weather has been
+most favourable. With the exception of the rainy days
+in Canada, and the cold and rawness which characterised
+the time of our short visit to Richmond, there was
+nothing worse to complain of than continual sunshine.
+Now and then the temperature was a little too good to
+be pleasant when we were traversing the beds of the
+dry seas in the desert in Colorado and California, but
+that was something to look back upon with satisfaction,
+because there was no time lost in keeping within doors
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span>
+owing to the rain and storm or cold. "Within doors,"
+however, is a phrase scarcely applicable to our mode of
+life, as it would imply that we were in stable habitations,
+whereas, as will have been seen by those who
+have accompanied us so far, we "lived and moved, and
+had our being" in railway carriages; a mode of life
+rendered so comfortable by all appliances, that it was
+sometimes no relief to be told that we would have to
+pass the night at an hotel.</p>
+
+<p>For nine days and nine nights in succession, on one
+occasion, we never slept out of the carriages or got out
+of the train except to take a stroll about the station, or
+a peep into the street of a small town whilst we were
+waiting, and one got quite accustomed to that nomad
+and yet civilised mode of existence, where at every
+halting-place we were supplied with the latest intelligence
+by the local papers, and made the recipients of
+some attention or courtesy, visits and compliments (the
+remarks of the other sort not being many), bouquets of
+flowers, presents of fruit, and plenty of conversation.
+But that my critics might say I dilate too much upon
+the material enjoyment of life, I would describe at
+length the means which were supplied in the course of
+these long journeys for animal enjoyment. Never could
+there be found more attentive and obliging domestics
+than the coloured men who waited upon us&mdash;Arthur
+and his fellows. There lived in the kitchen compartment
+of the train, at the end of one of the saloons, a
+coloured cook, very intelligent and gossipy, full of
+quaint conceits and dishes and conversation, who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>
+commenced life as a slave on a Southern plantation,
+probably adopted for indoor purposes on account of his
+smartness. He liberated himself in the course of the
+war, and marched off with a regiment of Federals in
+the capacity of cook and body-servant to one of the
+officers, wherein he saw a great amount of very hard
+fighting at very close quarters. This adventurous
+modern Othello was wont to discourse with much animation
+when he came out for a breath of fresh air on
+the platform and could find anybody to talk to him,
+although he could move no more tender heart than
+that of Sir Henry Green. The gentlemen of the
+Atchison, &amp;c., Railway, when travelling with us, had
+a <i>cordon bleu</i> in the saloon&mdash;an Italian or Frenchman,
+I think, or at all events a French-speaking man, who
+had served also, and would have done credit to an
+establishment where faults in a <i>chef</i> would not lightly
+be condoned. In the interchange of courtesies, Mr.
+White and his friends invited our party now and then
+to dine in the saloon, which was not "across the way,"
+but up a little, on the line, being the saloon in front
+of us.</p>
+
+<p>But here we are at Kansas City once again! At
+5.30 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> the train arrived at the platform, which was
+gay with a Sunday crowd, of whom many were negresses&mdash;black,
+brown, brindled, and yellow <i>citoyennes</i>&mdash;in
+much variety of colour and garmenting. Unlike Samson,
+their weakness is in their hair, and like Achilles, they
+are vulnerable about the heels (to the arrows of an
+æsthetical criticism, which accepts the Greek idea of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span>
+beauty in form); but they seemed to enjoy life amazingly,
+and not to be in need of beaux; perhaps the
+happiest people in the world now that their chattel
+days are over. It was late when we turned into our
+berths, for it was a lovely night and the fire-flies exercised
+a great attraction over us, but at last the charm
+was worn out and we slept till morning without a
+break.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 20th.</i>&mdash;Still the same boundless plain. In vain
+does one look for the grass fields with close, even,
+carpet-like surface to be seen in Europe. We are still
+passing through exceedingly rich land&mdash;the fields covered
+with flocks of sheep and herds of good-looking cattle.
+There are more trees by the stream-side, and shrubs
+growing in the hollows. Habitations are more frequent,
+and so are fencing and planting. As the sun was
+setting we approached St. Louis. There were some
+park-like glades, and vistas opening up to pleasant
+mansions, amid grounds showing marks of culture.
+There had been a severe thunderstorm the night before,
+and the St. Louis Station had still traces of its effects
+in pools of mud. But the rain had cooled the air, and
+the people were rejoicing exceedingly in the great
+improvement that had taken place in the weather, for,
+they told us, men and women had been dropping down
+with the heat a few days ago as though they had been
+struck by musketry.</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the St. Louis Terminus gave
+one a high idea of the importance of this city. Eight
+trains were waiting on their respective lines to start
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
+with passengers to all parts of the Union; and by
+the simple device of placing at the end of each train
+a large board announcing its destination and the time
+of its departure, much anxiety was saved to intending
+passengers, not to speak of the irritation of officials
+avoided by this simple expedient. The journey was
+continued by the <a name="Indianopolis" id="Indianopolis">Indianopolis</a> and Vandalia, and by
+what is called the "Pa'handle" line to the Pennsylvania
+Railroad on to Philadelphia. The train was timed
+on Tuesday so that we were able to see the famous
+passage over the Alleghany Mountains from Conemaugh
+to Altoona. For nearly eleven miles we were
+carried without steam, and with the brakes on, through
+very fine scenery, down the mountain-side, but the
+summit was crossed in the darkness of a tunnel 1200
+yards long. There are some striking engineering
+feats in the way of curves and gradients, and the
+trace of the line is very bold all the way down to
+Altoona, where the Pennsylvania Railroad engine and
+machinery shops are established&mdash;the centre of a
+population of some 17,000 souls, where twenty years
+ago "there were," as a friend said, "only bears,
+deer, woodpeckers, and skallywags." The Duke, Mr.
+Stephen, and our railway experts got out and visited
+the workshops, and came back very much pleased at
+the discovery of several London and North-Western
+men in good positions in the Pennsylvania Railroad
+Company's service, who welcomed their old directors
+with effusion, and that there was nothing visible there
+for Crewe to copy, unless perhaps cast-iron wheels.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span>
+The speed at which we travelled was a sensible proof
+that we were once more on the line of our old friends
+of Pennsylvania. From Altoona to Harrisburg, 132
+miles, we rattled along in two hours and forty-three
+minutes. On another stretch of the line we travelled
+eighty-three miles in one hour and forty-two seconds,
+including stoppages; and the rapid motion was very
+agreeable, as there was a perceptible increase of temperature
+after we reached the plains and approached
+the beautiful valley of the Susquehannah&mdash;a scene of
+industry, prosperity, and peace. Fortunately there
+was a good light on the river, and we had a fine
+view of the country all the way to Harrisburg under
+the rays of the setting sun. A little farther on we
+were gratified by the appearance of General Roberts
+at a station on the way, where he was awaiting the
+Duke to congratulate him on his safe return from
+the Western expedition, and we bade him farewell at
+his own house, with many sincere and well-deserved
+acknowledgments of great and constant kindness.
+Then over the river by the noble bridge, and on to
+Philadelphia. We did not visit Pittsburg, which was
+vomiting out masses of smoke, nor did we halt this
+time at the capital of the Quaker State.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+NEW YORK&mdash;NEWPORT&mdash;DEPARTURE.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Coney Island&mdash;Newport&mdash;Bass-fishing&mdash;Habit of Spitting&mdash;Brighton
+Beach&mdash;Newport&mdash;Coaching&mdash;Extra Ecclesiam&mdash;Victories
+of American Horses&mdash;Newport Avenues&mdash;Return to New
+York&mdash;Our last day in America.
+</p>
+
+<p>The special train was detained by the immense
+amount of traffic on the line, as we approached New
+York, and we did not reach Brooklyn till a little
+before 11 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> on June 21, so that it was past midnight
+when we ascended the steps of the Windsor
+Hotel, which we had selected by way of a change,
+and found to be every way commendable, with the
+exception of its distance from the busy parts of the
+city. The following day was devoted to letter reading
+and writing, receiving visitors, and various attempts
+"to go out," which were not generally successful, for
+New York was palpitating with the intense heat. The
+"heated term" was in full vigour, but it was now
+quite temperate in comparison to the excesses which
+had marked its advent some time before our arrival.
+In the evening we got up strength and courage
+enough to go to Wallack's Theatre, a very pretty,
+well-constructed house, and saw "The World" excellently
+acted and admirably put on the stage. Next
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span>
+day, June 23rd, in virtue of a solemn league and
+covenant with Uncle Sam and Mr. Hurlbut, the Duke
+and I devoted ourselves to fresh fields and pastures new,
+and ordered ourselves accordingly for Coney Island.
+A long bank of sand by the sea-shore has, by an
+accident, become one of the most crowded resorts in the
+world, and to-day there were races in the new ground.
+It was not, as we found, so easy to get there. Having
+the advantage of two experienced guides, our party of
+four managed to break up into two and to miss each
+other; one taking the boat at one iron pier, and the
+other embarking by a different mode of conveyance.
+But as we were bound to see Coney Island, the Race course
+being a secondary object, our temporary separation
+did not prove a source of great annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>The early settlers would indeed have been astonished
+if they could look round and see what they have
+brought the quiet place to in these later days. They
+were Quakers persecuted by the good Christians of New
+England, who were driven out of Boston as ruthlessly
+as though they had been malignants and papists of the
+worst sort. They settled the township of Gravesend
+about 250 years ago, and amongst the conspicuous
+settlers occurs the title and name of Lady Deborah
+Moody, of whom this deponent knows nothing, but
+wonders how, with such a title, she managed to have
+influence amongst a Society of Friends.</p>
+
+<p>A ship was built, so the Americans say, of 70 tons in
+1699, by the descendants of the Quaker settlers, and less
+than 100 years later the bold republicans, abandoning
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span>
+the doctrines of peace, engaged and captured an English
+corvette off the island. It was all along of General
+<a name="How" id="How">How</a>, who landed his troops here and set the people to
+work on the fortifications he threw up, whether they
+would or no. A corvette, bound to Halifax, anchored
+off the island, and an old whaler, who, says the
+chronicler, must have been smarting under the wrongs
+he had suffered at the hands of the red-coats, or who
+possibly regarded the work as he would the capture of
+a finner or a bottle-nose, imparted to a few trusty
+friends the idea of "cutting her out." So embarking
+at night in a couple of boats, they stole down with
+muffled oars and ran up under the stern of the ship.
+There was no watch, and through the cabin windows
+the officers could be seen playing cards. The crews of
+the boats boarded the corvette simultaneously, seized,
+overpowered, and bound the officers and men, lowered
+them into their boats, and, having set the man-of-war
+on fire, pulled over to the Jersey shore with their
+prisoners. It is to be hoped that the demeanour and
+language of the captain have been misrepresented by
+local tradition; but he is said to have cried bitterly,
+and to have exclaimed, "To be surprised and captured
+by two blooming egg-shells is too blasted bad!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a long period of neglect before Fashion
+and the populace found out the attractions of Coney
+Island. Fishermen, oyster-catchers, and sportsmen
+visited the sandy beach from time to time; then after
+a while a few houses were run up of a very inferior
+class, and these were frequented by the very worst of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
+the scum of New York, so that it was almost dangerous,
+and certainly disgusting, to go among them, while the
+scenes on the beach, to which the present proceedings
+afford such a contrast, were described as being of the
+most disgraceful character.</p>
+
+<p>The official directions for spending a day at Coney
+Island certainly indicate a belief in the possession of
+enormous physical energy and indefatigable curiosity on
+the part of the visitors in those who compose the code.
+Having given you sailing instructions by the iron steam boat
+to Bay Ridge for the Sea Beach Railway (ticket
+35 cents), you are to visit the Sea View Palace Hotel,
+the Piazza, the two iron piers, the <i>Camera obscura</i>
+(10 cents), the Great Milking Cow, the top of the observatory
+(15 cents); then to eat a Rhode Island clam bake
+(50 cents), visit the aquarium (10 cents), take a
+park waggon and ride over the Concourse to Brighton;
+see the hotel grounds and bathing pavilion there;
+then take the Marine Railway (5 cents) to Manhattan
+Beach; visit the Oriental Hotel and take the Marine
+Railway to Point Breeze (10 cents) and return back
+to Brighton Beach Pavilion and take a bath; then see
+the Museum of Living Wonders (10 cents), dine at the
+Hotel Brighton, hear a concert in the evening, and
+return to New York by 11 o'clock. "This trip,"
+observes the compiler, "may fatigue one, but the
+excitement soon overcomes the trouble." Coney
+Island is indeed an institution.</p>
+
+<p>Along the sea front of the bank for some three or four
+miles there has been constructed an esplanade lined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
+with seats, and defended from the sea by a stone wall.
+Outside there is a belt of shingle on which the surf
+breaks, but not violently, unless in bad weather. Large
+bathing establishments, with every appliance, are placed
+at convenient intervals along the shore. Here in the
+season tens of thousands of people may be seen, all
+properly and decently attired, disporting in the waves.
+At the time of our visit, the hour and the season
+of the year seemed not to be favourable to the indulgence.
+We were too late in the day. It is an
+early place, and from 7 till 9 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> from the month
+of June to the end of September are described as
+the orthodox periods. Nevertheless the spectacle was
+quite unique, and if you can imagine Brighton with
+half-a-dozen Pavilions blown out to twice their size,
+and the largest hotels multiplied by ten in length,
+breadth, and depth, you may fancy what the Coney
+Island front is, provided always that you can also
+conjure up (literally) myriads of well-dressed men,
+women, and children perambulating the esplanade or
+sitting in the grounds around the various establishments
+which occupy a large space inland&mdash;pavilions,
+hotels, exhibitions, restaurants, and club-houses. There
+were fireworks going on in broad day; but these were
+principally for the purpose of exhibiting very ingenious
+Japanese figures, which were discharged from bombs,
+and which gradually descending were objects of eager
+competition amongst the younger members of the
+enormous multitude. And with all so much good-humour,
+so much propriety of demeanour; none of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span>
+brutal rushes of "roughs" which disgust one with
+English popular assemblages&mdash;none of the brutal horse-play,
+and screams, and unmeaning cries of the 'Arrys
+and the Bills of our popular resorts.</p>
+
+<p>Looking at Mr. Marshall's excellent book on the
+United States, which we found to be copious and
+accurate, I was struck by what he says respecting
+a habit of the people which, according to my experience,
+has very much decreased since I was last
+in the States, but which he finds in as full force, and
+repulsive as ever. I am bound to say I think the
+habit of spitting has very much diminished, but from
+numerous evidences, from the presence of spittoons in
+every room and in the passages of the hotels, and
+from public admonitions, such as one we saw at some
+of the theatres, that the audience would not spit upon
+the stage, I must believe that it still exists. What
+the cause of this habit may be it is not easy to determine.
+It cannot be in the race, because it is
+scarcely an "English" habit. I would be inclined to
+attribute it to the drinking of iced water, but ladies in
+America use the national beverage quite as freely as
+the men, and spitting is a masculine failing. Can it
+be a result of climate? Scarcely. For in the States,
+British-born people do not seem to be affected by the
+influence of the habit in those around them after
+many years' residence. Smokers and non-smokers alike
+indulge in the practice, so that tobacco cannot be
+charged with the disagreeable custom. I assume that
+it is as common as Mr. Marshall asserts it is, but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
+I am bound to say, according to my own observation
+and experience on my last visit, that there was no
+evidence to show that it was common or national.
+Chewing tobacco also appears to me to have fewer
+votaries than formerly. A remark to that effect at
+Richmond brought upon me something like a rebuke
+from the gentleman to whom I spoke, a Judge of the
+land. "No, sir," he said, "not at all! I rather think
+we chew more than ever!" And, to illustrate his faith,
+he produced a silver box, shaped a plug of no doubt
+very excellent weed, and thrust it into his mouth. I
+do not recollect, however, meeting a gentleman in the
+course of our journey who used tobacco in that way,
+with that exception.</p>
+
+<p>In the grounds in front of the pavilion, where an
+excellent orchestra of some one hundred performers
+were playing, sat a very large and appreciative audience,
+who applauded with discrimination, and were content
+with the good performance of each piece.</p>
+
+<p>Our common rendezvous was the Surf Club, one of
+the numerous convivial associations for which Coney
+Island seems to be specially adapted; and I presume
+the name had nothing at all to do with any supposed
+amusements of the members in connection with the
+surf on the beach outside. There was some difficulty
+in finding our way through a labyrinth of rooms all
+filled with guests: with corridors swarming with
+people; with vast halls, where at hundreds of tables
+there were seated people engaged in the consumption
+of the <i>menu</i> of a Coney Island restaurant, abounding
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
+in strange dishes and attended by armies of waiters.
+At a rough guess, I should say there may have been
+about 4000 people in the building&mdash;and this was but
+one of several&mdash;I think the Brighton Beach Hotel,
+but of this I am not quite sure.</p>
+
+<p>When the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad
+was opened none believed in its success, but the foresight
+of the projector was justified; and when it was
+found that respectable people would go there, if the
+vagabonds of both sexes and their associates were
+driven away, the police asserted themselves, and swept
+off the gamblers and the others of a still more
+dangerous class, who were to be found there in
+increasing numbers every year; and then hotels were
+erected and landing-places made for the steamers;
+and now the electric light blazes in a hundred
+halls, and music and rejoicing sound late into the
+night, contending with the noise of the surf upon the
+beach. Bowling-alleys, shooting-grounds, archery,
+croquet, sailing and rowing, all invite some of the
+visitors, according to their tastes. An amusing exemplification
+of the ingenuity of American advertisers is
+afforded by the sailing vessels, which display in enormous
+characters on their main-sails the names of quack
+medicines, from which no corner of this continent
+appears to be safe.</p>
+
+<p>On June 24th the party, which had been somewhat
+dislocated, reunited their scattered forces, and at
+2 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> started by train after a little repose, for Newport,
+R.I. It was a kind of holiday after our travels,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span>
+but somewhat out of place, for we were told the
+Ocean House was scarcely ready; but we should not
+have found it out, had we not been informed of the
+fact. The newspapers had been on the alert, and soon
+after the Duke's arrival visitors began to call and
+invitations to pour in&mdash;some well-nigh irresistible, for
+they included opportunities for experiences of bass-fishing.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 25th.</i>&mdash;Newport has not yet put on its festive
+attire. It is not the season, and we ought not to be
+here. Nevertheless it is still so pleasant, and so respectably
+dull, that one enjoys it amazingly. After
+breakfast we walked down to the seashore and sat
+gazing on vacancy, and on three yellow ladies collecting
+clams. Returning thence in a very hot sun, ran to
+earth in the hotel where, presently, there were many
+visitors; and how kind and anxious to please they
+were! Mr. Fearing drove up later on the top of a drag,
+and whirled us away to a charming fishing-box on the
+shore, in order to judge for ourselves what bass-fishing
+was like. It was a very pretty drive, and Mr. Fearing
+handled his "four" as if he were bent on joining the
+Coaching Club&mdash;not indiscreetly, as the horses were
+not accustomed to going together, but with satisfactory
+decision&mdash;and we all were landed without mishap by
+the side of the road, close to one of the best-organised
+sporting-boxes I have ever seen, built entirely for the
+comfort and delectation of Mr. Fearing and two or
+three friends who own the bass-fishing stands, at the
+end of one of which a gentleman was then busily
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
+engaged in his pastime, for the sea comes rolling up
+upon the rocks within some forty or fifty yards of the
+sward of the green meadows on which the house is
+placed. From it projects into the breakers a platform
+supported on iron pillars, at the end of which there is
+an enlargement of the structure to enable the fisherman
+and his attendants to stand at their ease&mdash;the one
+in hurling the bait and the other in preparing it.
+And first, as a proof that the labour is not futile, there
+was exhibited a terrible-headed monster with great
+scales, which had been caught that morning by Mr.
+Whipple&mdash;a bass of 57 lbs. weight, of which I think
+the skull and jaws and gills must have weighed a third.
+The fishing is not, as I found, to be done at once, but
+needs a little practice. The art of casting consists in
+the double operation of jerking the bait from the top
+of a stiff rod, and checking the run of the line without
+permitting it to overrun, which it is very apt to do in
+an inexperienced hand, by a pressure of the thumb on
+the reel, just sufficient to let the weight of the bait carry
+out the hook to the farthest stretch of the jerk. The
+rod, not more than eight or nine feet long, a work of
+great art, and costly, is furnished with a reel, also very
+expensive, containing a couple of hundred yards of
+prepared line. At the end is a large single hook,
+sometimes secured to a piece of piano-wire, as the
+"blue fish" will cut through the strongest cord or
+gut. To this is fixed a junk of fat oily fish, of which
+supplies are kept in a basket close at hand, to be cut
+up for ever and ever by the attendant, and ever and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
+anon pieces are chucked into the sea, and being of
+a very unctuous nature, the oil rising to the top, floats
+away on the surface of the water, and attracts the bass
+within measurable distance of the platform. Captain
+Fearing threw, Mr. Whipple threw, and the gentlemen
+at the end of another pier emulated them, and pounds,
+perhaps stones, of bait were thrown into the sea, but
+the bass, which are capricious, like most fish, were not
+to be caught; and so after a time we returned to the
+cottage.</p>
+
+<p>I was, unfortunately, unable to accept an invitation
+from one of the many hospitable gentlemen in Newport,
+to go out and spend the evening on a desolate
+island, where they are said generally to have exceedingly
+good sport, in order to get up before sunrise the
+following morning and essay my skill, or want of it, in
+bass-fishing. Mr. Wright, an enthusiastic sportsman,
+availed himself of a like invitation with great pleasure
+and with many anticipations of delight, but on Monday
+morning he returned weather-beaten back, and boot-less
+and bass-less home, although he assured me he
+enjoyed himself very much, and had very agreeable
+company out at sea on the rock.</p>
+
+<p>The following day (June 26th) was cloudy and cool,
+and all that was of rank and fashion in Newport went
+to All Souls Church. There are many churches in
+Newport, and in the height of the season, each is, I am
+told, well filled on Sundays. And wonderful it is that
+there is neither dissension nor controversy among the
+congregations. They mingle together coming and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span>
+going, affording to me, who have been accustomed at
+times to observe the manners and customs of my
+country men and women on like occasions in Ireland
+and elsewhere, ground for wonder, not unintermingled
+with an ardent desire that we, nearer home, could learn
+the secret of this moderation.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bridgman, our fellow-passenger in the "<i>Gallia</i>,"
+is enjoying his <i>villeggiatura</i> with his wife and family in
+a pretty little cottage. We were very much pleased
+indeed to renew our acquaintance with him, although
+there was no scope for the display of his fine talents
+as a salad-maker. It was not foggy enough for the
+ladies, who delight in a thick and moist <i>brume</i> from
+the Banks, and who sit at the open windows when it
+comes on for the sake of their complexions, as it is
+esteemed a sovereign cosmetic beyond Maydew or
+Kalydor. Whether it be rightly credited with these
+virtues or not, I can answer for the presence of many
+fair ladies in church, and on their way to and fro in
+the streets. We dined with Mr. and Mrs. Keene, who
+reside in one of the best villas of the many charming
+dwellings in Newport.</p>
+
+<p>The victories of the American horses in France and
+England created an enthusiasm in the States almost as
+intense as though they had been won by the national
+fleets or armies. From one end of the Union to the
+other the news was flashed the same day, and we saw the
+names of the conquerors in large letters in every newspaper.
+Unfortunately there came at the same time
+reports of foul play to American competitors at the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>
+hands of some English roughs, and there was a good
+deal of heat caused by the objections taken to the
+entry of the "Cornell Crew" at Henley. These international
+contests should be very carefully conducted
+and judiciously worked, or they will do more harm
+than good, if indeed they do any good at all. The
+injurious insinuations respecting the age of Foxhall
+could but excite indignation in the minds of honourable
+men against whom they were directed.</p>
+
+<p>There is a State House in the town, and there is
+also a mansion occupied by Commodore Perry, but
+the most useful inhabitant of the place appears to
+have been one Abraham Touro, a Jew, who gave his
+name to the park, a cemetery, a synagogue, and a
+street. Altogether there is rather an old-world air
+and look in the town; but one must go along the
+Avenues to have an idea of the charms which lead so
+many of the principal families of the Eastern States
+to make the place a resort when they are not enjoying
+the delights of travel in Europe, or that blissful
+existence which endears Paris to our Transatlantic
+relatives. Bellevue Avenue is bordered by a number
+of very sprightly dwellings, of every order and disorder
+of architecture, and rejoicing in all the extraordinary
+richness and elaboration of American workmanship
+in wood, each standing in a little park of its
+own, generally rich with trees, shrubs, and an ornamental
+garden. Several of these interiors, as we
+had reason to know, were furnished in the very best
+taste, and filled with objects of art, excellent examples
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>
+of good masters, principally foreign, and articles
+imported from all the corners of the globe. Of
+an afternoon the ladies might be seen driving, in
+very well turned-out carriages, to some rendezvous
+where lawn-tennis or a picnic awaited them; and
+altogether, even at this time of year, Newport
+presented a picture of great refinement and comfort,
+which enable the visitor to understand how attractive
+it must be in the height of the season, and why it is
+Americans are so fond of life in Rhode Island.</p>
+
+<p>I am not in a position to throw the smallest doubt
+upon the statement that the mass of stones in the
+form of a tower, ivy and moss covered, and evidently
+the work of human hands, was not built by the hardy
+Norsemen hundreds of years before the arrival of
+Columbus. There are, moreover, people who declare
+that the erection is due to a British governor of the
+colony, when it was more prosperous as a commercial
+resort, though not so fashionable as it is at present.
+But American antiquaries take a great pleasure in
+propping up the proofs which have been adduced of
+Scandinavian enterprise and discovery on the continent,
+many centuries before Vespuccius, Columbus, and
+the English navigators lived.</p>
+
+<p>We dined on the evening of the 27th at the house
+of Mr. Shattock, a gentleman of New York, who had
+assembled a party of very pleasant people to meet the
+Duke, and kindly hastened his dinner-hour to suit
+our convenience, as we were obliged to go on board
+the Fall River boat, which called at 9.30 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> to take
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
+up passengers for the Empire City. There was some
+difficulty about getting cabins or state rooms as they
+are called, but "Uncle Sam," who came from New
+York to consort with us quietly, applied himself
+diligently to telegraph wires, telephones, and the like,
+and when the great steamer came alongside the wharf
+our dormitories were ready. The night was calm and
+fine. There was an excellent band, quite worthy of
+being called an orchestra, on board, which played to
+the delight of a large audience till it was bed-time.
+As a "sight" for a foreigner, nothing could be more
+striking than the vast saloon, brilliantly illuminated,
+with hundreds of people on sofas, chairs, and benches,
+reading or conversing in the intervals of the music,
+and presenting infinite varieties of type and class, yet
+all so orderly and well-behaved; and if you moved
+quietly through the crowd, your ear caught many
+strange languages interpolating the American speech&mdash;German,
+French, Polish, Russian, Italian, and, perhaps
+the natives would say, British. There is some
+care observed in the locking up of cabins, and I believe
+there are detectives and police on board the boats;
+but it is said they do not look after the morals of the
+passengers, and concern themselves only with vested
+interests in portable property. There was no sea on,
+and the only motion was caused by the beating of the
+paddles and the throbbing of the engine, and early in
+the morning of the next day we were at our quarters
+in our comfortable hotel in the Fifth Avenue.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 29th.</i>&mdash;And yet more excursions. Bound by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span>
+a long-standing engagement, a small detachment of our
+party set out this evening to visit Mr. Barlow at his
+country place, Long Island, which travellers, perhaps,
+have not much occasion to see. The Mayor of New York
+(Mr. Grace) and Mr. O'Gorman were on the steamer
+which took the Duke, Mr. S. Ward, Mr. Hurlbut, and
+our host down the Sound, and were introduced to us
+by Mr. Barlow. The first-named gentleman I mentioned
+in one of the early pages of this diary in connection
+with the vigorous efforts to purify the civic
+atmosphere made by him on his accession to office. I
+learn that he has since obtained a large measure of
+success, and let me hope corresponding thanks from
+his fellow-citizens. Attacks on corrupt influences are
+apt to receive lukewarm support from the politicians.
+The power of the respectable classes, which hold aloof
+from politics, is not large. Mr. Grace had more opposition
+than help from his own countrymen, who have
+been long nearly omnipotent in New York, and who
+monopolise a large proportion of the civic offices and
+employment. Mr. O'Gorman, one of the traversers
+with O'Connell in the famous State trials, is one of the
+leading lawyers of New York, and is held in much
+respect by his fellow-citizens. The "old Country" is
+still dear to him, but I seemed to gather from his
+remarks that he shared in the distrust which American
+lawyers generally expressed respecting the principle of
+the Land Bill then under discussion as far as interference
+with the law of contract&mdash;"the very foundation
+of social life"&mdash;was involved. Glen Cove is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span>
+a beautiful place, standing high above the level of
+the sea, and commanding charming views of the
+sound and of the opposite shore. It is surrounded
+by trees, ornamented by woodland and fine natural
+groves, broken up by ravines, through which trickle
+streams of water. The mansion is furnished with
+every comfort and luxury, and we had a garden to
+saunter about in the morning, and a genial hostess to
+talk to, and her fair daughter to sing for us, so that
+it would have pleased us well to have made a longer
+sojourn at Glen Cove. Here we passed two very
+peaceful days, part of Wednesday and Thursday, and
+in a pleasant drive with our host in the early morning
+had some slight outlook on umbrageous Long
+Island. "<i>O! si angulus iste!</i>" It is 115 miles long
+and 14 miles broad, and quite big enough for me!
+And there be deer in the woods and trout in the rivers,
+and fish in all the creeks, and game in the wooded
+lagoons, and forest, lake, and civilised life, and many
+things to please the eye; and then the comet was so
+good as to display his glories and his tail before
+Glen Cove. But our time of departure from the States
+was drawing near, and there were still things to be
+done in New York, and many engagements to be kept,
+ere we started on our homeward journey on July 2nd;
+and at 12.35 on the 30th June the Duke and I took
+the "cars" at a rural station, and reached New York
+at 2.35, in time for a run through Tiffany's and some
+little shopping and visiting. There was a dinner
+arranged by "Uncle Sam" at "Sutherland's" in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
+honour of the famous city restaurant. The house is
+one of a type which has, I believe, disappeared in the
+"City," where once flourished famous establishments
+such as Williams' Beef Shop in the Old Bailey, Dolly's
+in Paternoster Row, the Billingsgate Fish Ordinary,
+Jacquet's, &amp;c., like it in character. Great New Yorkers
+do not disdain to cross the threshold, within which
+they find admirable fare and excellent wines&mdash;the
+national delights of clam chowder, clam soup, soft-shell
+crabs, and many other Transatlantic delicacies&mdash;at
+the far end of Broadway, still holding its own against
+the fashionable restaurants. Of the party who dined
+there with Chancellor Robertson and others in 1861,
+only "Uncle Sam," Mr. S. Barlow, and I survive; but
+the host, a granitic sort of man, with a kindly Scottish
+heart warming the case inside, seems capable of
+presiding over his feasts for another generation.</p>
+
+<p><i>July 1st.</i>&mdash;It was difficult to realise the idea that
+this was our last day in America, but the truth was
+forced on us by the practical duties of getting the
+baggage ready and settling up generally, ending with
+a dinner at the Turf Club, where we met Mr. Keene, of
+Foxhall fame, who had also entertained us at Newport,
+Mr. Jerome, Mr. Stuart, Mr. Travers, and other
+fathers of the New York sporting world, which seems
+very like our own, and had to drink madeira of all but
+fabulous antiquity and excellence.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+RETURN TO EUROPE.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+The "<i>City of Berlin</i>"&mdash;The Inman Line&mdash;The Service at Roche's
+Point&mdash;Queenstown Discomforts&mdash;A sorry Welcome Home.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>July 2nd.</i><a name="FNanchor_B" id="FNanchor_B" href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">[B]</a>&mdash;Up at 5.30. The Duke, Lady Green,
+Sir Henry, Mr. Wright, Edward, all engaged in the
+transport department, with Mr. Trowbridge in observation;
+incessant activity. The Queen Anne coach
+was in readiness at 7.30, and in half an hour more we
+were discharged at the Inman wharf. There was
+a great flotilla&mdash;five large steamers leaving at the
+same period for Liverpool, and there was the usual
+throng at the landing-places of friends to bid "good-bye"
+to those who were about to cross the Atlantic.
+The steamer we had selected belonged to the Inman
+line, and whatever there may have been wanting to
+the eye on board, compared to the trimness and paint
+of the Cunard steamers, there was nothing to regret
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span>
+in our accommodation or service. There were so many
+passengers that the dining-saloon, illuminated by the
+electric light&mdash;which was also used for the purpose of
+lighting the engine-room and the lamps in the
+corridors&mdash;would not contain them all at the same
+time, and so there were two messes for dinner. Epergnes
+filled with the most beautiful flowers were ranged in
+order, and a rampant war-steed composed of white
+roses was displayed on the table. I am not about
+to give a log-book, or to trespass on the patience of
+my readers by an account of such an ordinary event
+as a passage home. The second day after we left New
+York was the anniversary of Independence, July 4th,
+and the day was duly celebrated by the citizens of the
+United States, who constituted the large majority of
+our fellow-passengers. The "stars and stripes" were
+hoisted at the main, and the cabin was draped with
+British and American flags. But there was no
+speechifying, and the spread-eagle was content with
+moderate flights; a recitation and a song or two, and
+the fire of champagne corks, being the only indications
+of an extraordinary festivity.</p>
+
+<p>About this time of the year the Atlantic, in the latitudes
+which we traverse, is rather vexed of fogs; and
+if one be disposed to low spirits, I know nothing which
+weighs upon him more than the sound of the fog-horn.
+But what must it be for the captain, who is perforce
+obliged to go at full speed, or as near to it as he
+can, with the expectation every moment of some startled
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
+cry from the bow "Sail right ahead!" Nor is it quite
+out of the running that an iceberg may be taking a
+sail across his course. Fortunately we had no experiences
+of the kind; and as night was falling on the
+10th July land was in sight.</p>
+
+<p>The lights of the Fastnet were seen through drifting
+haze, and about 10 o'clock at night the "<i>City of
+Berlin</i>" steamed through a rising sea, with a strong
+beam wind, into the roadstead of Roche's Point,
+burned her rockets, and laid-to for the steamer to
+take the mails, and those passengers who had decided
+to land, on shore.</p>
+
+<p>It was blowing freshly, and rain fell heavily; and
+as we looked down from the lighted decks on the
+murky water, and made out the tug as she paddled up
+to us, rising and falling on the waves, we were seized
+with reasonable misgivings as to the propriety of
+leaving our ship and taking to such a craft. I am
+bound to say that our experience more than amply
+justified them.</p>
+
+<p>I am writing these lines with a very faint hope
+that any amendment will be introduced, in consequence
+of what I say, into the abominable service between the
+American vessels off Roche's Point and Queenstown.
+In fine weather and in daylight it is not of much
+consequence, perhaps, what discomfort one may be
+exposed to in a short passage to the shore; but to
+affront women and children with the misery which
+must be experienced at night time and in bad
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
+weather, in the steamers employed in the service,
+is little short of barbarous, if it be not indeed altogether
+so.</p>
+
+<p>After I had got down upon the deck of the little
+steamer and surveyed the scene around me, I thought
+that it would have been much wiser to have gone on
+with my friends to Liverpool; but I had some engagements
+in Ireland, and so had the experience I was glad
+not to share with my fellow-passengers, on whom I
+should have liked the old country to have made a
+favourable impression. There was the great steamer,
+with hundreds of waving hands, and the sound of
+friendly voices bidding us "God speed," a blaze of
+lights, and almost as steady as the solid earth, as the
+horrible little tug puffed away, and, getting from
+under her lee at once, encountered the swell. If she
+could have ridden over the water below, she certainly
+could not escape that which came down from above;
+so that we were all pretty wet and cross and miserable
+in the half-hour which elapsed before we reached the
+shore. Fortunately, there were not many passengers
+who availed themselves of the opportunity; but the
+deck of the steamer was crowded by poor people
+returning to their native country. Accommodation
+for the cabin passengers, except seats on the wet and
+sloppy decks, there was none. There was a little
+cabin, stuffy and comfortless, and moreover occupied
+by a couple of women who had come out to see friends
+by way of a pleasure excursion, and who were suffering
+the last extremities of sea-sickness. The spray
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
+broke over the luggage and passengers; it was in such
+circumstances that the custom-house officers began
+their search. One of them, opening my bag, which
+was unlocked, found a small revolver. It was unloaded,
+and there was no ammunition for it; but,
+nevertheless, it was seized, for I was "importing arms
+into a proclaimed district without licence." A similar
+mishap occurred to a Spanish officer, who was not
+quite so easily appeased as I was by the assurance
+that the arm would be given up on proper application
+to the police. His revolver, he insisted, was part of
+his uniform, a necessity of his existence, and the
+authorities might as well seize his epaulettes or spurs.
+However, my deadly weapon was restored to me some
+days afterwards, after a correspondence with the custom-house,
+and I dare say the Hidalgo was equally
+fortunate. These were incidents to denote that we
+were in the midst of trouble. There was but a sorry
+welcome for us when we landed at Queenstown. Not a
+car to be found, that I could see; but there were a few
+porters, and the agent of the hotel at the pier; and,
+commending my luggage to his care, I walked to the
+establishment. It surely cannot be quite an unaccustomed
+event for a steamer to arrive at Queenstown at
+that time of night! The last train for Cork had gone;
+and it might have been expected that lighted rooms
+and some sort of preparation would have awaited
+the travellers; for every vessel that touches at Queenstown,
+coming from America, surely lands a few people
+needing rest and refreshment? A demoralised waiter,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
+who appeared to think that such a thing had never
+happened in the whole course of his experience, as
+the inroad of ten or twelve people asking for supper
+and bedrooms, informed us that nothing could be done
+until the gentleman who represented the hotel at the
+landing-place had arrived; and so we sat on the stairs
+for half an hour, and were then shown into a gaunt
+room, dimly lighted by gas. There was nothing
+ready. The hungry people, by dint of patience and
+perseverance, eventually succeeded about midnight in
+obtaining some poor substitute for supper and scrambled
+to their beds.</p>
+
+<p>I mention the circumstances in which my fellow-passengers
+and I were landed at Queenstown, that
+those who are interested in promoting the welfare of
+the port, and in making the route through Ireland less
+thoroughly objectionable, may take steps to obviate
+the great inconvenience to which travellers at present
+are certainly exposed.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning I reached Mallow. I was but a few
+hours in the "distressful country," but I found that
+things had gone from bad to worse while we were in
+the States. I heard from my fellow-travellers in the
+train that "Boycotting" had attained such a pitch in
+the South, that all the relations and conditions of
+social life were exposed to peril, if not destruction.
+And still, with the usual cheerfulness of Irish landlords,
+accustomed, as it were, to these excesses of the
+popular will, my informants talked of hunting, fishing,
+and shooting; and I heard full accounts of the state of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>
+the rivers, and of the take of fish which had made some
+of them happy. The County Cork, indeed, had nearly
+a parallel in the "wild West." But what a contrast
+between the state of public feeling, in respect to the
+outrages which were perpetrated in each, in the country
+we had left, and that to which I had returned! In
+the United States there was no attempt to justify the
+men who were guilty of such deeds. In Ireland it
+was impossible to obtain evidence or to convict the
+offenders. I am not going to close this narrative of
+our little excursion with a political disquisition, indeed
+I have not the materials for forming any opinion respecting
+the breadth and depth of what may be called
+the Irish national movement in the United States;
+but there seems to be a general vague impression in
+America that as the British Government was not very
+wise and equitable in its dealings with the people of
+the thirteen colonies in the reign of King George, it
+is, somehow or other, at the present moment, treating
+with harshness and injustice the whole of the Irish
+race in Ireland. It is impossible not to recognise the
+fact that the head, perhaps the heart, and certainly
+the purse of this development of Irish discontent are in
+the United States. The arms, the body, and the legs
+are in Ireland. During the whole time of our visit,
+although we visited towns where eminent orators were
+lecturing upon Irish subjects, and where representatives
+of the League were in session, there was not a
+trace brought home to us of the strong sympathy which
+undoubtedly exists in many American cities with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>
+movement in Ireland. There were accounts of the
+meetings in the newspapers, and now and then a few
+leading articles on the subject; but we might have
+concluded, from what we saw and heard generally,
+that the Irish question was of far less importance to
+the American people than the religious views of Colonel
+Ingersoll, or the discussions between the railway companies
+respecting their fares. The recital of wrongs,
+most of which have been long ago redressed, still
+reaches the ear and touches the heart of the American
+public, and if the Irish population had not in many
+ways provoked or excited the antagonism of the native
+Americans in the towns, and of the Teutonic element
+which exercises such a powerful influence in the
+country, there would be far greater sympathy for the
+supposed oppression of the Sister Island by England.
+The fact that emigrants come from Europe is accepted
+as a proof that the countries which they leave are ill-governed;
+and Americans, in dealing with the emigration
+question, are apt to forget the existence and nature
+of the forces which induced their own ancestors to seek
+homes in the New World.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>New York Times</i> declared in an article last
+June, that there is no essential difference between the
+two divisions of the Irish in America and of the Irish
+in Ireland. The voyage across the Atlantic works no
+transformation in Pat, and he is still as much an
+Irishman after his plunge into an alien civilisation
+and taking out his papers as when he stood on the old
+sod in Meath or Tipperary. "He cares no more for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span>
+the American eagle than for an owl; but a sprig of
+shamrock stirs him to ecstasy. The name of Washington
+has no meaning for his ear; but that of St. Patrick
+is a living and potent reality." That statement, however,
+must be taken with qualification. There are
+to-day 90,000 acres of land in Minnesota as thoroughly
+Irish as if they were planted in the centre of Connaught.
+There are Pats and Pats. Many of the
+most wealthy and prosperous merchants, bankers, and
+landowners whom we met in the West were not merely
+of Irish extraction, but born Irishmen, and the extraordinary
+spectacle of Irish millionaires who knew how
+to keep their money, and to add to it, too, may be seen
+in San Francisco and elsewhere in the West. Many,
+less fortunate, have high positions either in the army, or
+as politicians, or in the estimation of all that is great
+and good in America&mdash;such as Mr. O'Conor&mdash;men who
+have held aloof from politics, and who could not be
+tempted, even by the Presidentship, to enter the arena
+of party strife. One convicted rebel of 1840 now
+occupies a leading place at the American bar. I heard
+him denounce the Land Bill in terms he might have
+used in denouncing the atrocities of the Saxon in his
+hot days when O'Connell was king. The influence
+which has been acquired in many parts of the Union
+by the Irish immigration and by the descendants of
+immigrants has naturally excited at various times the
+opposition and indignation of the American born, and it
+has always been more or less opposed by the Teutons
+of different nationalities who occupy such a powerful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
+position in all the great States of the West. But "the
+Native Party" is now either dead or sleeping. A very
+distinguished officer and politician said to me that he had
+at one time been a most eager and ardent adherent of
+the policy of the Native American Party, but that when
+he saw how earnestly and devotedly the Irish had come
+forward in defence of the Union, how brilliantly they had
+fought, and how recklessly they had sacrificed their lives,
+in 1861, he felt constrained to abandon his principles,
+and to admit their free right to all the privileges of
+American citizenship. I could not, however, but recollect
+that General Richard Taylor, in his most
+amusing, able, and graphic work on that same war,
+from the Confederate side of the question, bore the
+strongest testimony to the services of the Irish in the
+army which fought under the banner of the Slave
+States. In New York and in San Francisco the Irish
+element has exercised almost supreme control in municipal
+matters, and it may be said, without offence I
+hope, that, whether it be owing to the opposition they
+have encountered or to a radical deficiency which may
+be Irish rather than Celtic, their management has
+not conduced to the comfort of the cities or to the
+pecuniary purity of the Executive. In San Francisco
+there is a strong anti-Irish press and much anti-Irish
+feeling. The 'Argonaut' repudiates the thraldom
+of the Irish associations and factions in the Far West
+as strenuously as the 'Times' and 'Tribune' do in the
+East. But notwithstanding all that may be written
+and done, it is impossible to resist the influence of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
+numbers under a system of suffrage so large as that
+which exists in the greater number of the American
+States. It was curious to read in a Californian paper
+an appeal to England to suppress Irish agitation.
+"We confidently believe," says the <i>Argonaut</i>, "that
+the wisdom of its public men, the healthful condition
+of its public opinion, and the strength of its military
+power will be sufficient to crush out the Land League
+movement, which is but incipient rebellion. That
+England will deal justly, firmly, and successfully with
+this effort of united ecclesiasticism and Communism is
+the earnest wish of every intelligent and independent
+mind that believes in free government, the guarantees
+of property, the rights, and the personal liberty of man."
+However, there are American parties, if not statesmen,
+whose wishes are by no means directed to such a consummation,
+and we must take note of the fact.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Education&mdash;Free Schools&mdash;Influence of Money in Politics&mdash;Corruption
+in Public Life&mdash;Crime on the Western Borders&mdash;The Great
+Rebellion&mdash;Anniversaries&mdash;Great courtesy to strangers&mdash;Manners
+and Customs.
+</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poem">
+<p class="o1">"Westward the course of Empire takes its way;</p>
+<p class="i1">The four first acts already past,</p>
+<p>A fifth shall close the drama with the day,</p>
+<p class="i1">Time's noblest offspring is the last."</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The "tar-water Bishop of Cloyne" would have been
+exceedingly astonished could he have seen the first
+line of his prophecy or averment made to do duty as a
+motto to Mr. Bancroft's History of the United States;
+but surely if the prophecy be not realised, it will be
+the fault of the agencies engaged in working it out&mdash;never
+in the history of mankind, as we know it, have
+such advantages been enjoyed by any nation as have
+been, and are, the appanage of the Americans of
+European origin in the New World. They have
+leaped into the possession of their heritage full armed,
+like Minerva from the brain of Jove. For them have
+all the champions of human rights died or conquered,
+and the protagonists of human struggles for liberty
+and light fought. For them Science has trimmed her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span>
+lamp&mdash;for them martyrs have died&mdash;for them Europe
+and Asia have been in toil and travail for countless
+generations, and they have been guided across the
+sea to a grand continent where it would seem as if
+Nature had been engaged for myriads of ages to provide
+for their happiness and grandeur&mdash;all climes and
+all products are theirs&mdash;the bounteous plain, the ore-filled
+mountain, the treasures of the deep, the heaven-made
+ways by lake and river, and it would be a
+despair for all mankind if they misuse their glorious
+inheritance, and if all the nations of the world see
+that the pillar of fire in the west was but an <i>ignis
+fatuus</i> dancing before their aching eyes in a Serbonian
+bog of creeds and 'isms, of factions and faiths, all
+struggling towards the gate of the Temple of Mammon.
+"Philosophers," in all the doubts and fears
+which the condition of the Republic inspires at times,
+cling with confidence to the palladium which is, they
+think, to be found in the system of education based
+on the free schools of the States. If there were not a
+distinction between knowledge and morality, they
+would be justified; but the Evil One tempted us to
+eat of the fruit of the tree which brought sin into the
+world, and if Americans are to be trusted as authorities,
+the result of the largest and most liberal system of
+education ever devised is not as happy in practice as
+it ought to be according to theory.</p>
+
+<p>As the central Government extended its sway over
+the Territories there was a uniform system, when assigning
+land for public objects to railway companies, of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
+retaining for the School Fund a portion of the land in
+each Territory, as it was settled and admitted as such,
+under the control of the central Government. In the
+States Constitutions creating Sovereign States, there
+are provisions inserted, varying very little in language
+and not at all in spirit, which render it compulsory
+on the Legislature of each State to maintain public
+schools free to all the children of the people residing
+within its borders. Another principle, of universal
+application, provided that all schools under public
+control should be free from sectarian or denominational
+teaching, in the schools or in the books used for educational
+purposes. With such safeguards for the extension
+of education, it is depressing to find that, in
+certain districts at all events, crime and immorality
+prevail in the United States as extensively as in the
+benighted kingdoms of the Continent of Europe. But
+the most serious consideration in connection with the
+system of common schools in America, is the fact that
+serious doubts are intruding themselves respecting the
+success of it. In a recent official report it was stated
+that whereas the children who ought to go to school
+numbered about fourteen and a half millions, the
+average attendance was not more than five millions.
+But, assuming that all the children went to school,
+there are people who declare that the education given
+under the National system is by no means satisfactory.
+Mr. R. G. White affirms that the system is a failure;
+and high authorities assert that "any comparison between
+the results obtained in the public schools of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span>
+New York, Cincinnati, and Boston, with those of such
+public grammar schools of England, as Bedford, Manchester,
+and the City of London, is simply ridiculous."
+The teachers are continually shifting, and when the
+teachers, as they do in this land of liberty, go away,
+the schools are deserted, the constant services of a staff
+cannot be retained unless there is very considerable
+increase in the rate of payment now made to the male
+and female teachers. None of these in any State have,
+I think, more than about 9<i>l.</i> per month. Mr. White
+says that "the mass of the pupils of the public schools
+are unable to read intelligently, to spell correctly, to
+write legibly, to describe the geography of their own
+country, or do anything that reasonably well educated
+children do with ease; and they cannot write a simple
+letter, they cannot do readily a simple sum in practical
+arithmetic, they cannot tell the meaning of any but
+the commonest of words they read and spell so ill.
+They can give rules glibly, they can recite from
+memory, they have some dry knowledge of the various
+ologies and osophies, they can, some of them, read a
+little French or German with very bad accent; but, as
+to all real education, they are as helpless and as
+barren as if they had never crossed the threshold of a
+schoolhouse." It is from American writers that these
+accusations against the common school system are to
+be gleaned. Some statisticians say that crime and
+pauperism are increasing far more rapidly than population.
+The charge on the State for punishing criminals
+and keeping paupers last year was $20,000,000, or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span>
+£4,000,000; but it is too much to attribute crime and
+pauperism to the defects of the schools. It might
+with more reason be argued that the teaching of the
+people in the schools tends to develop the looseness
+and eccentricity of thought, where there is no religious
+teaching, which are exemplified in the uprising of extraordinary
+sects and strange philosophies; for America
+is the land of spiritualists, mesmerism, soothsaying,
+and mystical congregations. Mr. Hepworth Dixon
+may not be a perfectly unimpeachable authority on
+the subject of the number of spiritualists in America;
+but there can be no question they are to be counted by
+millions. It is averred that believers in spirits generally
+believe in "special affinities which imply a spiritual
+relation of the sexes higher and holier than that of
+marriage." It is not wonderful then that there should
+be also a very large number of divorces, especially
+in the New England States. Mr. Nutting says that
+"in the history of nations there has never but thrice
+occurred such a breaking up of the family tie as is
+now taking place, especially in Rhode Island and Connecticut,
+among the people of New England blood."
+Mormonism, although of American origin and early
+growth, has been mainly successful by the constant
+importation of ignorant peasants from Europe.</p>
+
+<p>There is a want of reverence on the part of children
+towards their parents which is very striking. Americans
+who have admitted and deplored this have sought
+to account for it by the school system, wherein the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span>
+State usurps the place of the parent, and teaches the
+young idea to mock at any authority but that of the
+schoolmaster. It would be lamentable to have to
+admit that free education is associated with the
+weakening of parental influence. Theoretically, there
+is nothing in the American system to prevent the
+teaching of religious and moral duties by parents at
+home; but it would seem as if very little of that kind
+of instruction was given by the busy fathers and
+anxious mothers of the Republic, and that when the
+day's work is done at school, and some time given to
+the preparation of the studies for the day to follow,
+there is no further teaching.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think the rule "By their fruits shall ye
+know them" can be applied to the public schools, in
+connection with the prevalence of crime, immorality,
+unbelief, or eccentric religion. But it is certain the
+system has not by any means secured that high level
+of general education, or what education is supposed to
+bring with it, which its friends claim for it in the
+States. There is reason to believe that the standard
+of morality has not been uniformly high in the political
+world, and that in the public intelligence the judiciary
+does not aspire to an absolute immunity from suspicion.
+Even in the old settled States, legislators from
+time to time may be found, who, seated among the
+good and wise, excite admiration akin to that which is
+aroused by the spectacle of a fly in amber. It has
+been observed by travellers that whatever affection
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span>
+may exist in families, it does not attain that keen
+sensibility and lasting power which is found in French
+domestic life.</p>
+
+<p>When American newspapers of the greatest influence
+and circulation write invectives against the corruption
+which prevails in places high and low, when writers
+of great intelligence and known character contribute
+similar articles to periodicals which possess the highest
+position in the literary world of America, a stranger
+may be permitted perhaps to say a few words respecting
+the impression produced upon his mind by what
+he heard and read on the subject when he was in the
+country, without it being alleged that he attempts to
+assail the principles of free government, or to make
+invidious charges or wholesale accusations against a
+nation. I know too well the force with which Americans
+could retort if they were so minded, and how
+they could point to the reports of election judges
+which set forth the prevalence of extensive bribery,
+led to the suspension of writs, and will perhaps end in
+the disfranchisement of some ancient and populous
+boroughs and constituencies in England, and to the
+speeches of Sir Henry James in Parliament, to cast
+any stone out of my glass house on that score; but I
+do not think it can be established that persons in a
+position at all analogous to that of the members of
+a State Legislature have been purchased wholesale in
+England, Ireland or Scotland, or that even a complete
+Borough Corporation had been bought up. Now,
+nothing was more common in the Far West than to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span>
+hear it stated openly that Senator So-and-so had
+bought his place, and that Mr. So-and-so had purchased
+a State Legislative body in order to "get
+through" some railway or other scheme. That was
+accepted in fact as a matter of course, and not contradicted
+or questioned by any one. We heard from
+time to time of the sums which So-and-so would
+expend to buy his senatorship, and of the money
+actually paid to secure the passage of a line from the
+legislature of O&mdash;&mdash; and the like, whilst stories relating
+to the purchase of judges were common in the conversation
+of the hotels and cars.</p>
+
+<p>I do not aver that these stories were true. I only
+know that they passed current and were not challenged
+by those who were around us. "Thoughtful persons,"
+who exist in the United States as well as in the
+vicinity of Pall Mall clubs, lament, deplore and hate the
+evils of growing corruption with all the fervour of
+honest and powerless natures. The mechanism is
+scarcely concealed. It stands before the world with less
+attempt at disguise than the gallows in the gaol. Mr.
+Parton, in the 'North American Review' of this July,
+writing on the power of public plunder, says: "At
+present, in the ninety-fifth year of the Constitution,
+we are face to face with a state of politics of extreme
+simplicity, of which money is the motive, the means and
+the end. What was the last Presidential election but a
+contest of purses? The longest purse carried the day,
+and it carried the day because it was the longest.
+Some innocent readers perhaps have wondered why the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span>
+famous orators who swayed vast multitudes day after
+day and night after night, have not been recognised in
+the distribution of office. They were paid in cash from
+ten dollars a night to a thousand dollars a week." And
+then he goes on to describe the business in detail, and
+to show what this power is. He says: "There is a
+boss in the city of New York who will take a contract
+for putting a gentleman into Congress. Pay him so
+much and you may go to sleep, wake up and find yourself
+member elect. A boss is a man who can get to
+the polls on election days masses of voters who care
+little or nothing for the issues of the campaign and
+know of them still less. They operate upon the
+strangers in the land who are unable to use its
+language and are unacquainted with its politics."
+Mr. Parton describes with humour one of these
+"bosses," an improvement on the pugilists and cormorant
+thieves of a remote period. "The Emerald Isle
+gave him birth; the streets of New York, education.
+To see the brawny, good-tempered Irishman walking
+abroad in his district when politics are active is to get
+an idea of how the chief of a clan strode his native
+heath when a marauding expedition was on foot. He
+lives in a handsome house, and has more property than
+any man has ever been able to get by legitimate service
+to the United States. He treats his dependants and
+retainers nobly, but as the agent and organiser of
+spoliation he is a prey to every minor scoundrel, for
+at certain seasons he dare not say no to any living
+creature. And yet it requires tact, self-possession
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span>
+and resource to move about among needy people with
+a pocket full of money, an embodied "yes," and have
+some of it left after the election. The strikers, as
+they are called, go for solid cash now instead of target
+companies and clambakes for which the candidates
+paid the bills." "Money, money," exclaims Mr. Parton,
+"everywhere in politics, in prodigal abundance, money,
+except where it could secure and reward good service
+for the public, hecatombs for the wolves, precarious
+bones for the watchdogs." The details in the article
+are precise, and if they are to be trusted it may be
+doubted whether the claims of the United States to
+possess a cheap government can be maintained, for it
+is not cheap to pay responsible executive officers a
+precarious pittance per annum if now and then it costs
+a million dollars to change them. Mr. Secretary Blaine
+has thrice declared that the election in October 1880
+in the State of Maine, a model New England State,
+was carried by money. His opponents declared that
+he and his party were as bad, and that they too
+flooded the towns with money. What renders the
+situation more dangerous is the fact that the men who
+provide the money for running these enormously expensive
+political combinations are either seekers after,
+or holders of, office, and the inference is that they seek
+to control Government, or, as Mr. Parton puts it, that
+"the Government is coming to be rather an appendage
+to a circle of wealthy operators than a restraint upon
+them." That is indeed a serious proposition, and the
+result of observation goes to support the idea that it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>
+is valid. The small man is in office, but the big man,
+his master, is outside. The mischief is brought prominently
+forward in connection with the sale of public
+lands in the North-West, which have been claimed as
+the heritage of the people, and indeed of all the
+nations of the world. The government land attracted
+the hardy labour of all countries, covering the western
+west with thriving towns and populous counties. But
+now the prairies are skinned by rich men, by "land-grabbers,"
+people who buy up tracts of twenty thousand
+or thirty thousand acres wherever they can lay their
+hands upon them, evading the law and filling the
+western world with roving labourers who work on
+these prodigious farms in summer and starve in winter.
+This is, we are told, the result of "government by
+lobby."</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally there is an exceeding great and bitter
+cry over all this from the depths of the body politic.
+Some great paper in a moment of deep mental agony
+publishes an article like that, to which I have called
+attention, by Mr. Parton; occasionally some preacher,
+nobly daring, thinks it necessary to direct attention,
+from his pulpit, to the progress of corruption. Dr.
+Talmage delivered a very remarkable discourse whilst
+I was in America on the text from Job. xv. 34: "Fire
+shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." Although
+I do not profess exactly to understand to what particular
+sect he belongs, he is one of the leaders of
+religious thought, dividing with Beecher and others
+the popular favour in the Empire City. The State
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span>
+buildings at Albany ought to be heavily insured if the
+reverend gentleman's vaticinations are right. It was
+an American discourse. I cannot give the whole
+oration. The people of the Brooklyn Tabernacle were
+presented with a muster-roll of the people who had
+distinguished themselves amongst the great ones of
+the world. Cobden, Brougham, O'Connell and Rowland
+Hill were placed in juxtaposition as leaders on our
+side of the water. Of course it was impossible to resist
+the allusion to Francis Bacon and to Macclesfield; but
+it was scarcely correct to say that the Lord Chancellor
+Whiteberry&mdash;I presume a misprint for Westbury&mdash;"perished,"
+nor do I quite understand what the preacher
+meant by the awful tragedy of the <i>Credit Mobilier</i>.
+Washington, Ben Butler, and John McClean were
+linked together for the benefit of Americans. They
+were, Dr. Talmage declared, great politicians, but "out
+of politics there has come one monstrous sin, potent
+and pestiferous, its two hands rotten with leprosy, its
+right hand deep in its breeches pocket. This is bribery."
+Dr. Talmage called upon the American people to judge
+the crime. "Under the temptation of this sin," he
+exclaimed, "Benedict Arnold sold the fort in the
+Highlands for thirty-one thousand three hundred and
+seventy-five dollars; Gorgy betrayed Hungary, Ahitophel
+forsook David, Judas killed Christ. I think," he
+says, "when I see the strong men who have gone
+down, of the Red Dragon in Revelation, having seven
+heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon its head,
+drawing the third part of the stars of heaven after it."
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
+And therefore he proceeds to preach against bribery.
+He thought it was the right time, "because the Legislature
+in New York is busy in investigating charges
+of bribery. The whole country woke up in holy horror
+at the charge that two thousand dollars had been
+offered to influence a vote in the Legislature, as if
+this was something new; as though in one State nine
+hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars had not
+been paid a legislator of the State Government by a
+railway company to get its charter and secure a dedication
+of public lands; as though three-quarters of
+the legislators of the United States had not, through
+bribery, gone into putrefaction whose stench reached
+heaven. After a few weeks' hunting the squirrel has
+stolen the hickory nut. Gentlemen in New York hunt
+out wrong by day and play poker and old sledge at
+night at Delavan House. It was like the country
+which had spent six millions of dollars in lawsuits
+about William Tweed going suddenly into hysterics
+when it found out that he had stolen a box of steel pens.
+California is submerged in the grip of a great monopoly;
+in Kansas United States senators had been involved
+in charges of bribery; in Connecticut an election to
+Congress was bought as men might buy a box of strawberries.
+Last year they were convicted of attempting
+bribery in Pennsylvania, but the Court of Pardons
+liberated them with the exception of two judges, who
+were told that they would be cut off from political
+preferment for their obstinacy. A Pennsylvania United
+States senator used to put a price on legislators just
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span>
+as a Kentuckian puts a price on his horse." But it was
+not legislators alone that Dr. Talmage attacked. He
+declared that the railways, the common carriers of the
+country, were tainted by a favouritism which was, in
+fact, the result of bribery. One company made rebates
+in its fares to some favoured corporation, as in the case
+of a petroleum company, which was enabled to control
+the price of that light all over the world in consequence
+of a virtual monopoly that was given to it by arrangement
+with the railway. In the same way merchandise
+in grain, provisions, and cattle are placed in the hands
+of a few firms. "How much," asks Dr. Talmage, "did it
+cost the Elevated Railroad to keep the fare from dropping
+to five cents from ten cents? I have been told,"
+said he, "three hundred thousand dollars," which is
+60,000<i>l.</i> "Very seldom does a bill pass through any of
+our Legislatures if there be no money in it. Sometimes
+the bribery is in bank bills, sometimes in railroad
+passes, sometimes in political preferment, sometimes
+by the monopolies given to the legislators, what are
+called points, a corner, a flier, a cover, washing the
+street, salting down, ten up! If you want to know
+what these are, ask the bribed members at Albany and
+Harrisburg." Then he goes on, with some truth, to
+declare that the bribery begins far away behind all this;
+that it is really with the money subscribed for election
+expenses that the evil begins its course. "From the
+big reservoirs of subscribed election expenses the little
+rills roll down in ten thousand directions, and by the
+time the great gubernatorial, congressional, and presidential
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span>
+elections are over, the land is drunk with
+bribery." Perhaps it is quite as well that it is from
+an American orator and from an American writer such
+statements and such indictments proceed, rather than
+from a stranger like myself; but it is very clear that
+the evil which De Tocqueville indicated long ago has
+spread rather than diminished, and there is reason to
+think that it will do so until the public conscience of
+a great people is aroused to a sense of the enormity
+of the mischief. But it lies far down towards the base
+of the national institutions, and any attempt to extirpate
+it will fail until the doctrines of the "Spoils to
+the Victors" be rejected from the political catechism,
+and the interests of party made the means and not
+the end of political life.</p>
+
+<p>The letters which appeared in the <i>Morning Post</i>,
+written under the influence of the surprise and anger
+I felt at the extent and impunity of crimes of violence
+and the state of feeling, or want of it, respecting them
+in the West, were badly received in America, and
+were severely handled by a few papers, as I was
+informed; I expected that the mention of the subject
+would not prove agreeable, though I guarded
+myself most sedulously from a single offensive word&mdash;nay,
+went out of my way to palliate the offences
+against life and living, and to excuse the people
+who allowed them, whilst I most carefully drew the
+line&mdash;a broad one&mdash;between these border ruffians and
+the law-abiding, virtuous people of the settled States.
+I was not, however, prepared for misrepresentation.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
+One would have thought that I accused the
+kind hosts who had received us&mdash;our generous entertainers
+in so many cities&mdash;the courteous, polished
+gentlemen who accompanied us&mdash;of murder and robbery,
+and ascribed to them the brutal murders committed
+by Canty or the Kid. As I quoted chapter
+and verse, and as the papers which vilified me could not
+deny the statements, they wrote that I had been imposed
+upon by the vivid fancy&mdash;in other phrase, the
+deliberate lying&mdash;of their brother editors in the West.
+One organ had the effrontery to declare that the Duke
+of Sutherland expressed his delight at the kind and
+courteous treatment of the ruffians I denounced;
+adding, "somebody lied&mdash;it was not the Duke." No.
+It was not indeed! A friend sent me one of these,
+and below an article in which it was said that I might
+take my place "beside Basil Hall, Mrs. Trollope, and
+Dickens for libelling the people of the United States,"
+and that my stories were all inventions, there was a
+pregnant commentary as follows:&mdash;"Sunday, July
+17th: Daring Train Robbery; Bandits Boarding
+Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Cars; The Conductor
+and a Passenger Shot Dead, and the Safe in
+the Express Car Robbed; the Passengers Saved by a
+Brakeman."</p>
+
+<p>I hope it will not be imagined that I have any
+desire to cast obloquy on the grand efforts, supremely
+successful as they have been, to turn the prairie and
+the desert to the uses of civilised man and of the
+world, and to open up the Western Continent to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span>
+humanity and civilisation. I am too sensible of the
+courtesy, ready service, and hospitality everywhere accorded
+to the party of English travellers of which I
+was one, to write one word which I thought calculated
+to give pain or offence to any of our many friends or
+to any right-minded American. <i>Maculæ solis!</i> 'Tis a
+pity they are there! In a few years, perhaps, the
+memory that such things were will have passed away
+like the recollection of some evil dream. But public
+sentiment must make itself felt, and above all there
+must be some abatement of the maudlin sympathy,
+which is virtually on the side of crime, if it be active
+in averting punishment.</p>
+
+<p>Crime in America, especially in the Eastern States,
+is very much the same as it is in other countries,
+but in the far West there is more recklessness in
+dealing with human life, which, in spite of the Howard
+Society and of humanitarians, I believe to be connected
+with the indulgence extended under State laws
+by American judges and juries to criminals who
+appear to be deserving of nothing but the strict and
+unmitigated application of the rope. "Property" is
+safe, for the citizens hunt down with extraordinary
+energy marauders whose object is simply plunder.
+Ordinary robbers and gangs of burglars are speedily
+and summarily suppressed. It is otherwise with those
+who assail life and limb. The desperadoes who infest
+the "saloons," as they are called, with which every
+western settlement is sure to be provided as soon as
+the shingle roofs are placed on the earliest upheaval
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span>
+of deal planks which can be called a dwelling, have
+far greater immunity and freedom than burglars or
+robbers. Wherever the train stopped for water on
+our journey in New Mexico, Western Colorado, or
+Eastern California, a rectangular wooden box, with
+a verandah, open doors, windows screened by a
+muslin curtain, perhaps a flagstaff with the Stars and
+Stripes flying, a large signboard, and some high-sounding
+name&mdash;the "Grand Alliance," "Union
+League," "El Dorado," "Harmonium," "Arcadia," or
+the like&mdash;was visible, with the usual group of booted
+and bearded miners, and their horses hitched up at the
+door-posts in front; inside you would be certain to
+find men of the same class at a bar, behind which,
+known for miles around, the affable Charlie, Bill, or Bob
+was dispensing drinks and mixing cocktails, slings, and
+the other drinks, in which the badness of the spirit is
+artfully disguised by a stimulant of a more active
+character and more pronounced flavour, known as
+"bitters," and kept in subjugation by the liberal use
+of ice. For even in these burning regions ice is
+stored up as the one thing needful. The rudest miner
+is accustomed to it; iced drinks are consumed by
+classes in America far below the social level of those
+who never taste them in this country.</p>
+
+<p>As the train was halting at Colorado Springs the
+stewards engaged in an animated discussion respecting
+a certain erection of poles and rafters just visible
+in an adjacent field. "I tell you dat's it." "I say
+tidn't." They were discussing the probability of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>
+scaffolding being the gallows whereon "Canty, the
+Buena Vista murderer," was to be hanged the day
+after. On April 29th, last year, Mr. Canty was
+standing on the platform in front of Lake-house
+with "Johnny the Ham," "Curly Frank," and "Off
+Wheeler," when Thomas Perkins appeared in an alley
+opposite, endeavouring "to induce 'Dutch Bill' to go
+with him to the office of Justice Casey, who had
+deputised him for the purpose." Canty and his companions
+at once ran across and demanded his release.
+Before Perkins could answer, Canty fired and missed
+him. The second shot wounded Perkins in the arm;
+the latter drew his pistol, but before he could use it
+Canty fired; the ball shattered the constable's hand.
+"For God's sake," he exclaimed, "is there no policeman
+to help me?" He fell, and Canty, walking close
+to his side, coolly sent a bullet through his body. He
+was arrested, tried, and convicted. His counsel applied
+to the Supreme Court for a <i>supersedeas</i>, but the court,
+after solemn argument, refused the application. Then
+they applied to the Governor of the State, but Mr.
+Pitkin, though "a weak-kneed man," would neither
+grant a reprieve nor a commutation to imprisonment
+for life. There was, he said, no ground "to set aside a
+verdict of a competent jury and the district judge
+reviewed and approved of by the Supreme Court." In
+the very last hour a woman came forward, and the
+Denver paper gave <i>verbatim et literatim</i> the text of the
+document in which ... "with dew regard," she offered
+Sheriff Spangler $50,000 (10,000<i>l.</i>) to save the life of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>
+W. H. Canty, her cousin, whose real name was, she said,
+N. H. Salisbury. "I entreat you to have him spared
+till you have an interview with me." She added that
+"Jennings and his brother in Leadville would pay a
+still larger sum. You may have ample means for
+life," &amp;c. A gentleman of the press, who came into
+our train at South Arkansas, was present at the execution.
+Just before the drop fell, Canty, who had expressed
+complete confidence in his ultimate liberation
+till the day before his execution, spoke for fifteen
+minutes, protesting his innocence. Then he exclaimed,
+"Good-bye, nothing can save me. I have faith in the
+Saviour and a hereafter." The trap was sprung, but
+to the horror of every one, the rope broke at the beam.
+The murderer's neck, however, was dislocated, and "a
+happy relief was experienced" when it was found he
+had died a painless death. As he was the nephew of
+an eminent statesman it was expected his friends would
+take action as to the disposal of his remains, which
+were put "in a neat casket at the sheriff's expense."
+In the journal there was a woodcut of the murderer.
+"Before his likeness could be taken holes were bored
+in the door and Canty was lashed to it, and then, when
+the door was set upright, the photographer watched a
+favourable opportunity when the head and eyes were
+quiet and secured the impression" from which the
+engraving was made. He was not so fortunate as
+Frank Gilbert, who was sentenced to be hanged the
+following day for a brutal murder, but respited, "in
+order that the proceedings may be reviewed by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span>
+highest judicial tribunal," by Governor Pitkin at the
+last moment, "till July 29," the day on which Rosencrantz
+is now sentenced to be hanged. The sheriff,
+Judge Ward, the clerk of the court, and the prosecuting
+attorney joined with others in petitions to the
+governor on the ground that the Supreme Court judges
+had refused a <i>supersedeas</i> in consequence of the defects
+and informalities of the record of the proceedings in
+the court below. Rosencrantz was respited, and the
+public, who had been expecting a double execution on
+the 18th of June, were disappointed, although they
+were allowed to slake their curiosity by the sight of
+the condemned men and by testing the ropes in the
+prison enclosure where the scaffold was ready. In the
+paper which gave the text of Governor Pitkin's
+reprieve there was a heading "Done Brown. Al.
+Huggins, marshal of Recene, turns out a bad man.
+He shoots and fatally wounds officer Brown of Kokomo."
+Phil. Foote, constable of Kokomo, formerly marshal of
+Robinson, and Al. Huggins, marshal of Recene, it seems
+had spent the night in visiting the saloons of Kokomo,
+and in the early morning began to fire their pistols and
+guns off in the street, and continued to do so until
+Andy Sutton, marshal of Kokomo, attempted to arrest
+them, but failed, "as he was quickly covered by two
+rifles." Mr. Brown, a police officer, asked Huggins to
+put up his pistol, and, to encourage him, proceeded to
+pocket his own revolver, when Huggins took deliberate
+aim with a 38-calibre Colt and shot Brown in the left
+breast, just above the heart. Huggins and Foote
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span>
+started for Recene. The marshal of Kokomo followed
+quickly in pursuit, with a large body of men.
+Huggins refused to surrender, whereupon the marshal
+shot him in the face. As there was a movement to
+lynch him, Al. Huggins was sent under strong guard
+to Leadville, but Foote escaped. "Brown was not
+dead by last accounts, but was not expected to
+live long." Then came a long account of another
+"Denver tragedy. Charles Stickney murders Mr. T.
+Campan and Mrs. H. O. Devereux in a boarding-house."
+Stickney was nephew of ex-Governor Clifford, of Rhode
+Island, served as lieutenant, 20th Regiment, in the war
+of 1861-4, graduated at Harvard, became principal of
+a school, married a lady whom he sent to London to
+study music, and tried mining whilst his wife was
+giving music lessons in Denver. There she met Mr.
+Campan, one of the best families in Detroit; Stickney
+shot him and killed a woman who was in the room
+at the same time. "Public opinion is in favour of
+Stickney, and he will probably be reprimanded." The
+evening of the day we reached Leadville, "Alderman
+Johnnie M'Combe, a leading candidate for lieutenant-governor
+and mayor, and last spring before the people
+for city treasurer," shot and wounded, probably fatally,
+a well-known actor named James M'Donald, because the
+latter had taken some children in M'Combe's buggy for
+a drive. It is not easy to determine how far Johnnie's
+chance of office may be affected by this ebullition, but
+the newspapers did not write of it with harshness; one
+gave it a comic character by the heading, "Ex-Alderman
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span>
+M'Combe attempts to perforate Jemmy
+M'Donald's cranium." In my morning paper of the
+same date I find that "James Hogan was foully
+murdered by James M'Cue in the open streets of Erie
+this afternoon in a quarrel about a handkerchief;"
+that Dr. Flemings, a prominent citizen of Portland,
+Ashley County, Arkansas, had appeased a quarrel
+between a pedlar named Gillmore and a coloured man
+very effectually, for, "incensed by a remark made by
+the pedlar, the doctor drew a pistol and shot him
+dead;" that "a prominent business man of M'Leansboro'
+had made a sensation on the streets to-day by
+hunting up, pistol in hand, one of the gay Lotharios of
+Hamilton County;" that "Daniel Keller, deputy
+county clerk, was stabbed and killed in the street
+of Virginia City by Dennis Hennessy, a kerbstone
+broker;" that "a searching party under Captain
+Leper had overhauled Hamilton, Myers and Brown,
+the outlaws who shot Sheriff Davis and Collector
+Hatter at Poplar Bluff, Mo.; killed Hamilton, mortally
+wounded Myers, and made Brown a prisoner;" that
+"James Hurd shot Jeff Anderson at Alamosa, Col., and
+that it was feared the latter would not survive." An
+account of the death of "Curly Bill," a notorious
+desperado, leader of cowboys and murderer of Marshal
+White, who was killed at Caleyville, Arizona, by his
+comrade, Jem Wallace, followed. They had a quarrel
+(of course, in a saloon). After a few drinks "Curly
+Bill" said, "I guess I will kill you on general principles."
+Wallace stepped out of the saloon and immediately
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
+opened fire, inflicting a mortal wound on his
+foe. After a brief hearing Wallace was discharged,
+and left for parts unknown. Then it was related
+how "Thomas Clarey ('Tommy the Kid'), a Durango
+outlaw, was killed by a comrade named Eskridge at
+Annego while drunk." A fratricide and three trials for
+murder were duly recorded. Another paper gave an
+account of South-West Colorado from the lips of a
+recent visitor to San Juan County. "Are you going
+back to San Juan? No, I think not; but it is a
+glorious country. The men there are a little rough,
+and kill each other on slight provocation; but a peaceable
+man who does not swagger and blow is not molested.
+There is no law, and courts and constables are
+unknown." He narrates how Aleck &mdash;&mdash;, acting as a
+barkeeper, "a noble-hearted, jovial fellow, full of fun,
+who looked you square in the eye, owns mines, said
+to be worth a million," settled a difficulty; I am
+inclined to think Mr. Charles Klunk rather drew on
+the interviewing reporter of the <i>Globe Democrat</i>.
+He was, he said, going to see a stockman who lived
+about fifty miles from the house where he was
+visiting. A farmer said to him "Come and take a
+drink with me, and I'll show you the barkeeper who
+killed the man you are going to see an hour ago."
+The stockman had come into the saloon whilst Aleck
+was in the back room, and began to abuse him. Aleck
+heard him, opened on the man with a revolver, and
+"shot him full of holes. Next day I asked him what
+he was going to do about it, and he said he had been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span>
+tried and acquitted, which meant that some of the
+leading men had told him that he had done right.
+There was no trial about it. When a man kills another
+out there in a fight they don't inquire very strictly
+into the circumstances, but make up their minds that
+they can't bring the dead man to life by hanging the
+killer, so nothing is done about it. But when a man
+murders another to rob him, the vigilants turn out
+and have no mercy on him. They just fill his skin
+with lead and tumble him into a hole like a wolf.
+After all, though the bears are plentiful in the
+spring, you can kill a deer 100 yards from the house
+where you like, the streams are alive with trout, the
+vegetables and crops splendid." Mr. Charles Klunk's
+resolution not to go back to this Happy Valley seems
+founded on sound constitutional principles. What I
+wish to point out is the condition in which the Central
+Government and State Governments have permitted
+many districts of New Mexico, Colorado, and California
+to remain. It is plain that the peculiar conditions
+under which the sway of the United States has been
+extended over the regions of the Far West have
+rendered it very difficult to establish the machinery
+for protecting life and property and punishing crime;
+but I do not see that the statesmen at Washington or
+the legislators at the State capitals are very much
+concerned at the reign of terror which prevails on the
+borders, or that they seek to impress on their people
+any regard for the sacredness of life. In fact, human
+life is almost a drug in the market. And I write
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span>
+fully sensible of the failures of our own and of all
+European Governments to repress crime, to prevent
+violence, and to ensure security to life and property.
+I am aware that Ireland and Poland are to the fore,
+and that wife-beating and "running kicks" illustrate
+the brutality of Lancashire and other districts&mdash;that
+London has its Alsatias, that every European capital
+has foul recesses in which the only laws are those
+of crime. All the world is busy preparing shoals of
+emigrants for the United States. It is only, however,
+when some savage outbreak affrighting the propriety
+of a great city arouses indignation and fear that there
+is a clamour for measures of repression. I do not
+think there is in any other part of the world, or
+that there ever has been in any civilised country,
+such shootings as have filled the land to which
+I allude with bloodshed. It may be said with
+truth that there never have been and that there are
+not any similar conditions in the world. But the
+absence of any great abiding movement for the correction
+and suppression of violence and lawlessness
+cannot be so readily accounted for or excused. There
+appears to be a sort of admiration for these border
+ruffians among portions of the American Press and
+public. Even a staid paper like the <i>Republican</i>, in
+an article headed "South-East Missouri: the Reign of
+Lawlessness about Ended," on the destruction of the
+New Madrid gang, writes of one who was sent to the
+penitentiary for thirty years "as a living monument
+of a bold and brave lot of desperate men who had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span>
+started out to make money by robbing their fellow-men.
+This swift and stern justice speaks well for this
+portion of the States, which has had for a long time
+more than its full quota of these lawless characters.
+Myers and Brown will be hung on the 15th July, and
+their execution will be witnessed by thousands of South-East
+Missourians." The spectacle of the hanging will
+not do much good, if it be like the execution at Colorado
+Springs, which was advertised as a sort of picnic or
+pleasure excursion. One advertisement ran, "After
+the hanging to-morrow drink La Salle beer; it will cool
+your nerves." "Highway robbery here has about run
+its course, and the people are determined that lawlessness
+in those regions shall no longer go unwhipped
+of justice." Very good. But, why not sooner and
+long ago? "Rhodes was hung by Judge Lynch when
+captured at the killing of young Laforge in New
+Madrid;" but the gang killed the sheriff and wounded
+the deputy-sheriff and collector before the people arose
+in their majesty to squelch them. A criminal is invested
+with a notoriety which, next to popular estimation,
+is valued by some men, and it is noted with
+interest that "Gilbert" (one pitiless murderer) is a
+Catholic, and that "Rosengrants" (another homicide)
+"inclines towards the Episcopalians." A Leadville
+doctor visits one of them to ask for his body. "No,
+sirree, you can't have my body; I'll be hanged first!"
+And the public laugh at the lively sally, and admire
+the <i>sangfroid</i> of the wit! In fact, there is a
+<i>tendresse</i> for crime in this grim humour. A Texan who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span>
+would "fill the skin" of a stranger "with lead" for
+aspersing Texas would no doubt heartily enjoy the
+description of the early population of the Lone Star
+State, which I quote from the Texas Press. "In the
+early days of the Republic, and even after annexation,
+many of the white men who came here had strong
+sanitary reasons for a change of climate, having been
+threatened with throat disease so sudden and dangerous
+that the slightest delay in moving to a new and milder
+climate would have been fatal, the subjects dying of
+dislocation of the spinal vertebræ at the end of a few
+minutes&mdash;and a rope. A great many left Arkansas,
+Indiana, and other States in such a hurry that they
+were obliged to borrow the horses on which they rode
+to Texas. They mostly recovered on reaching Austin,
+and many invalids began to feel better and consider
+themselves out of danger as soon as they crossed the
+Brancos River. Some who would not have lived twenty-four
+hours longer had they not left their homes reached
+a green old age in Western Texas, and were never again
+in risk of the bronchial affection already referred to by
+carefully avoiding the causes which led to their trouble.
+Some at Austin recovered so far as to be able to run for
+office, within a year, though defeated by a respectable
+majority, owing to the atmosphere and the popularity
+of the other candidate." The most extraordinary
+fact connected with the indulgence which is extended
+to Western excesses is the severity with which
+Northern and Eastern writers and publicists deal
+with the recklessness of Southerners with regard to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span>
+life, as if it were a political question in some way
+connected with slavery. In an article on "Colonisation,"
+in the July number of 'The International
+Review,' there is an attempt to prove that the prevalence
+of homicide in the South as compared with the
+North has impeded the flow of immigrants, although
+slavery has disappeared, and the writer, quoting Mr.
+Redfield's book on 'Homicide North and South,' says
+the terrible "scourge of open murder, wholly irrespective
+of political causes more deadly than disease or
+yellow fever, because each death is the result of a
+heinous crime, seems to be calmly accepted by public
+opinion as a part of the unchangeable conditions of
+social life in the South. In Kentucky more men are
+killed in six days than in eight years in Vermont. In
+a village of Connecticut a death from homicide has
+never occurred from its foundation, while in one graveyard
+in Owen County, Kentucky, the majority are
+murdered men, and in another county forty-two persons
+were killed and forty-three wounded in two years."
+But in the very same number of the 'International'
+there is an account of the doings of the "Vigilance
+Committee" of San Francisco (where there were no
+slaves and where there is immense wealth), which
+might cause the author of the paper on "Colonisation"
+to reflect a little on his theories. Surely in
+Arizona, California, &amp;c., where the foreign population
+is 50 per cent. of the natives, immigration has not been
+checked by the prevalence of homicide? It must not
+be supposed that there is no "law" in the towns where
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span>
+these crimes have been committed; in all the cases
+referred to the coroner did his office and verdicts were
+returned, and it will have been seen that "wretches
+hang" in due course. We had intended to visit the
+State prison at Cañon City on our way to Pueblo from
+Leadville, where we were promised an opportunity of
+seeing "thirty murderers all in a row," but the delay
+of the train on the road deprived us of the means of
+verifying the statement, and I give it as it was made.
+It would seem as if the criminal supply were super-abundant,
+or that death on the gallows had no deterrent
+influence. The chances of escape are, if not
+numerous, at least considerable. At Deming, Denver,
+Leadville, Tucson, Tombstone, and other cities, the
+vast mass of the inhabitants are law-abiding, peaceable,
+honest, and honourable men, who feel as much
+horror at the violence and bloodshed around them as
+the most refined lady in any saloon of Boston, Paris, or
+London, but they appear to endure these things in
+the hope that the law will be enforced at last; now
+and then they break into vigilance committees and
+execute their own decrees, though the judges do not
+fail to lay it down that they have been accessories to
+murder. The great civiliser and police agent is the
+railroad. It is affirmed that as the iron way is pushed
+on the outlaws and the <i>personnel</i> of outlawry congregate
+at the terminal town, but I suspect that there is
+a fringe of the material left on the border as it runs.
+As our party were at dinner in the palace-car one
+evening the train pulled up at a station. There was a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span>
+group of rough men on the platform, who stared in
+with all their eyes at the white tablecloth, set with
+bright glass and silver, and at the cheerful faces under
+the lamps. "How merry they are. I wonder if they
+know that this is Dodge City?" exclaimed one of the
+crowd. I was told by an official that when they were
+making a railway in these parts the surveyors, &amp;c.,
+were much troubled by gangs of gamblers and robbers,
+who impeded the work and debauched the men, so
+after due warning they made a razzia on the gamblers,
+shot a lot of them, and the rest "vamosed." There
+was not very long ago an actual war in the Grand
+Cañon Valley between the Atchison, Topeka, and
+Santa Fé Railway and the Denver and Rio Grande
+Railway, in which there was an array of armed forces
+and fighting on both sides, and we saw with our own
+eyes the remains of the breastworks cast up in the
+Grand Cañon by the belligerents. The law came in at
+last. "One side got at the judge first and gave him
+$50,000. The other was quite ready to go beyond
+that, but the first was too quick, and the suit went
+against the company." I was talking to a lawyer
+about the length of time which is allowed by the
+judges to criminals sentenced to death as a detail of
+the execution of the law not in accordance with the
+general practice of civilised nations, when one of the
+company remarked, "They must do it, sir, to please
+the people. If we had Judas Iscariot in gaol to-morrow
+there would be thousands of petitions to commute his
+sentence, and thousands of dollars ready for an appeal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span>
+to the Supreme Court. Our people don't like prompt
+sentence." Nevertheless, sentence and execution are
+pretty swift when the desperadoes take the law into
+their own hands, as we have seen. The revolver and
+the "saloon" are the agents and the scene in most of
+these murders, and whisky is too often the motive power.
+In Kansas it is a criminal offence to sell any intoxicating
+spirit, or to use it except on medical certificate. It is
+said that the law cannot last, but it surely was a very
+strong conviction of the evils which were endured by
+the community that brought a State Legislature,
+elected by the people, to enact that beer, wine, and
+spirits should be absolutely and entirely banished from
+its borders. Lately there was a prosecution by the
+State attorney of a man for selling spirits. The case
+was clearly proved. The judge charged the jury in
+the strongest manner against the defendant. The jury
+without retiring at once found a verdict of "not guilty."
+"Boys," exclaimed the judge, putting his hand on the
+foreman's shoulder, "Boys, I'm quite with you." The
+Kansas case will be, I think, watched with great
+interest by the rival parties in England, and it is
+certainly worth investigation and attention, for, if all
+I hear be true here, a Parliament elected by the people
+either in advance or in the rear of their constituents
+have passed a law which judges condemn, and juries
+evade, and public opinion derides.</p>
+
+<p>From a British, which may be an unintelligent, point
+of view, there is a want of logical method in the treatment
+of the Great Rebellion question by Americans.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span>
+There is a general disposition to speak of the war
+between the Federal Government and the people of
+the Confederate States as an historical fact which has
+ceased to present burning controversies and terrible
+issues to the Republic. But, at the same time, these
+controversies are kept alive, and, for the defeated, are
+stirred up incessantly by anniversaries and celebrations,
+natural but, if it be the object of Americans, as many
+of them assure us it is, to let the memory of the past
+die out like that of a horrid dream, impolitic. The
+spirit which animated the Southern States is neither
+dead nor sleeping. But there are no end of G. A. P.
+and G. A. R. Associations flourishing their banners
+and waving their sheathed swords in and out of the
+newspapers, and it is almost more than Southern flesh
+and blood can bear at times to be reminded of the
+defeats they sustained, even if they be content to
+admit that the doctrine of the sovereignty of States
+was a delusion, and that the indivisibility of the
+Republic was a fundamental principle of the Constitution
+before it was conclusively established by force
+of arms.</p>
+
+<p>North and South, our good cousins are fond of
+anniversaries and speechmakings. I wonder where
+they get their taste for them from? Some few
+veterans dine together on anniversaries of old French
+war days, and there is a Balaclava Dinner in the Old
+Country; but, though we have a reasonably long list
+of fighting successes to commemorate, their anniversaries
+are mostly left to the almanacks. The other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span>
+day the Americans had a celebration of the Battle of
+Cowpens, wherein the heroic Morgan gave the diabolical
+Tarleton the deuce of a whipping. I wonder if it was
+worth remembering? But it is better to remember
+such things perhaps than Sherman's Raid or Wilderness&mdash;or
+Chickahominy. There are bitternesses enough
+remaining&mdash;the rivalries and jealousies of generals are
+still active and these memories might be left to die
+out.</p>
+
+<p>The great war which so deeply moved the population
+of the United States has left many traces in Soldiers'
+Homes, and men deprived of legs or arms, or bearing
+marks of indelible wounds, are to be met with wherever
+there is any considerable gathering of people all over
+the Union. The clerk at the bar of the hotel, to
+whom we were talking a moment ago, was a captain in
+a regiment of militia, and served with distinction,
+having risen to the grade he occupies by conduct and
+courage during the war; and if he is known among
+his friends by the title of "Colonel," he deserves,
+probably, the brevet conferred upon him by the
+authority of the general public around him. The
+conductor of the train on the Pennsylvania Railroad,
+to whose attention we were so much indebted, was an
+ex-officer of volunteers, was engaged at the first battle
+of Bull Run, where he was wounded, and in several
+other actions. And our good friend the Major, who
+enabled us to pass many an hour listening to his
+admirable rendering of negro minstrelsy, bore in his
+body a proof of the dangers he had passed, in the shape
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span>
+of a Confederate bullet, or it might have been (for I am
+not quite sure now) a projectile of the Federal persuasion.
+And so on. Scarcely a day passed that we
+did not meet someone who had been fighting on one
+side or the other.</p>
+
+<p>One great change has come over Americans since I
+was last here, and, whether it was the ridicule to which
+they were exposed or to a sense of their greatness as a
+nation that it be due, it is to be commended. Except
+by a professional interviewer, not one of the party was
+asked, "What do you think, sir, of our country?"!</p>
+
+<p>The welcome which an Englishman who is entitled
+to admission into good society receives all over the
+States, in the best houses, and from the best men, is as
+gracious and warm as ever. It seems as if a reaction
+against the suspicion, jealousy, and harshness which
+marred the political relations of the Republic and Great
+Britain in times gone by, moved those who behave with
+so much courtesy to Englishmen, and that they seem to
+say, <i>sotto voce</i>, "Come and see how I forget the wrongs
+done to the United States by the Ministers of George
+III. and his successors! Admit that I can be as
+magnanimous as I am rich and cultivated! I am of
+your house, but I have transplanted all the good
+qualities of your race to American soil, and grafted
+them on the tree of liberty which towers aloft in all
+the splendour of Transatlantic luxuriance above us."
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Captain Pratt&mdash;Carlisle Barracks&mdash;An Indian Bowman&mdash;The Indian
+Question&mdash;The Pupils' Gossip&mdash;The "School News"&mdash;Indian
+Visitors&mdash;The White Mother&mdash;The India Office&mdash;White and Red&mdash;Quo
+Quousque?&mdash;Indian Title Deeds&mdash;The Reservations&mdash;The
+Indian Agencies&mdash;Missionary Efforts&mdash;The Red Man and the
+Maori.
+</p>
+
+<p>On the 5th of May the party visited Carlisle Fort or
+Barracks, one of the ancient military establishments
+of the Republic, where in the old times, speaking in
+an American sense, a considerable force was usually
+concentrated to keep watch and ward over the western
+frontiers, now extended thousands of miles away to
+the Pacific. The Barrack, which is a large quadrangle
+capable of containing a couple of regiments, is appropriated
+by the Government to this great experiment,
+the systematic education of the Indians of
+both sexes, whose families send them to school for the
+purpose of learning English and useful arts, mechanical
+and other, which may be of advantage to their people.
+It was, perhaps, one of the most interesting of the
+many little excursions which the Duke of Sutherland
+and his friends made in the States, and as it was the
+only one of the schools which we had an opportunity
+of seeing I shall proceed to give a little account of
+what we witnessed. In the first place let me express
+the sense which every one of us entertained of the real
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span>
+sterling qualities of Captain Pratt who is in charge of
+the school, and of the devotion and solicitude for
+their charges of those ladies employed in the training
+establishment. It may be asked how casual visitors
+could judge of these things? The discipline, order,
+progress, and perfect method visible in every room, and
+the intelligence and good understanding between the
+teachers and the pupils which could be perceived
+throughout the establishment, were adequate proofs, I
+think, that the praise is well deserved. At the time
+of our visit there were something under three hundred
+pupils, of whom perhaps two hundred were boys, and
+these were engaged in their class-rooms, each section
+of Indians being arranged according to nationality, if
+such a term can be used. But, indeed, the tribes of
+Indians differed from each other in personal appearance
+far more than do the races which inhabit the European
+continent. It is true they nearly all have straight
+wire-like black hair and eyes set deeply and rather
+obliquely in faces which are frequently of the Mongol
+type. But there is great diversity in the shape of the
+head, the angle of the jaw, the formation of the mouth
+and nose, the colour (when not tainted or "improved"
+by an admixture of European blood, whether Mexican
+or American or other) being pretty uniform, a rich
+bronze, with something of a copper hue, predominating
+in the young people. The boys were dressed in a plain
+neat uniform of greyish-blue, military tunics and
+trousers, well shod and comfortably equipped in all
+respects. The girls, amongst whom, perhaps, taste for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span>
+eccentric finery was not unobservable, wore dresses less
+uniform in appearance, generally neat and always clean;
+but their foot gear was rather eccentric. The rooms,
+spacious barrack-like apartments, well ventilated, were
+appropriated to the classes according to age and progress,
+the boys being separated from the girls. The
+walls were hung with maps and furnished with educational
+coloured prints, and boards for arithmetical
+exercises were in each apartment. The desks and stools
+were such as would be seen in an ordinary school, and
+if one had not looked at the faces of the pupils and
+been struck by some of the strange characters on the
+walls he would have thought himself in the middle
+of some ordinary school; save, perhaps, that his ear
+would have missed the curious humming noise which
+marks the industry of idleness or of legitimate work
+in similar establishments in Europe. But here were
+all these young savages, poring over their books or
+boring with their pens, looking up at the visitors
+scarcely with curiosity and applying themselves again
+to their work, or answering questions put to them with
+the composure which must be a portion of the Red
+Man's nature.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot recollect how many tribes there were represented
+at the Carlisle school; but I was struck by
+the race-distinctions which could be observed when
+Captain Pratt, standing on a raised platform, called
+out the names of each tribe. The little batches, in
+some instances only one or two, stood up briskly and
+looked somewhat proudly about, as much as to say,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span>
+"We are Sioux (or Apaches, or Ponchas, or Creeks),
+not like these other fellows." And the young ladies
+were, if one might judge from their expression, quite
+as proud of their own people as the boys. But the
+names these poor children receive are ludicrous. Not
+content with calling them by English names, or
+American, singularly misapplied, very often, as a name
+may be, their own Indian nomenclature is translated
+into English, so that we heard reading and reciting
+beside "Luke Phillips" and "Almarine McKillip" (a
+Scotch Creek) "Maggie Stands-looking" and "Reuben
+Quick-bear." There was something of sarcasm, I think,
+in the address of a Creek boy to the visitors. He said:
+"The Indian boys had come here to learn something
+about the use of the bow and hunting. Their people
+believed that if boys grew up to manhood without
+learning they would be of no use; therefore they had
+sent the boys here to get education." Then, after
+some moral if trite reflections, the lad said: "You must
+understand that nearly everything that was made was
+made both for the present and the future. This barracks
+was not built for Indians, as I do not think the
+men who built it ever thought that it would be an
+Indian school; but things were made to do good both
+in the present and in the future." And then quoth
+he, looking at his white friends straight in the face:
+"The education which we are getting here is not like
+our own land, but it is something that cannot be
+stolen nor bought from us." And the white man did
+not turn red at the words! I do not pretend to judge
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span>
+of the actual progress made in learning, but the very
+intelligent self-possessed teachers reported uniformly
+that they were satisfied. The most useful education,
+perhaps, which these Indians receive is in practical
+mechanics, and a visit to the workshops attached to
+the barracks was amply repaid by the sight of these
+industrious young fellows hammering and leathering
+away in the various departments. They have actually
+completed waggons of a most satisfactory construction,
+complete in all their parts, so much so that orders
+have been received for as many as can be supplied for
+the use of Agencies. They make and repair their own
+shoes. They have sent out a hundred and twenty
+double sets of harness. They make coffee-boilers,
+cups, pans, pails, and all the articles known to the
+tin-smith; and the girls are taught to hem and sew
+and knit in the English fashion; but it must have
+been not many a long year before the white man
+landed, when the ancestors of these Indian maidens
+exercised the same mystery with fine sinew and skin
+in the wonderful work of which specimens are handed
+down to us to-day. On one point alone, perhaps,
+there was something to regret; the health of the
+children was not all that could be desired. Well
+clad, regularly fed, I presume on wholesome food,
+cleanly lodged in well-ventilated rooms, these wild
+children of the plains scarcely came up to the expectations
+one would form of them in the matter of chest-measurement;
+and although many were remarkable
+for fine physical development, Captain Pratt confessed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span>
+that their sanitary condition was not everything that
+could be desired, and that losses from consumption and
+other causes were rather serious. But they have
+plenty of out-door exercise. They have games in
+which they rejoice. They drill and march to the
+sound of their own band, a very good brass band of
+eight performers, each of a different tribe, who played
+"Hail Columbia!" and the "Star-Spangled Banner,"
+and the like, with energy and zest; nay, with harmonious
+concurrence. When we went out into the
+large open square, there appeared before us a wonderful
+being in feathers, waving plumes, wampum and all
+the leathern panoply and peltry adornments of an
+Indian, painted, and armed with bow and arrow, probably
+such an one as Captain John Smith may have
+seen as he went exploring the woods of Virginia on
+his way to the sacrifice from which he was saved by
+Pocahontas. A target was erected at a distance of
+a hundred yards or so, and had I been in the centre of
+it, I should have been perfectly safe from the arrows
+which the Indian warrior discharged at it. But we
+were told that with a good bow a strong-armed Indian
+will drive an arrow right through a buffalo, and in
+that case I would suppose that the buffalo was very
+near to him indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Of course it is but natural to find very varying
+degrees of intelligence amongst the pupils, and the
+rate of progress was by no means uniform, but a
+committee of examination which recently visited the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span>
+school declared that the manifestations of advancement
+in the rudiments of English education were to
+them simply surprising. It was with admiration
+bordering on amazement they observed the facility and
+accuracy with which the children passed through the
+various exercises, in reading, geography, arithmetic,
+and writing, of the schoolroom; the accurate training
+and the amount of knowledge displayed were, they reported,
+the fullest proof not only of skilful teaching, but
+of great aptitude and diligence on the part of the children.
+Considering the brief period during which the
+school had been in operation, and the fact that the children
+entered it in a wholly untutored condition, the
+evidence was conclusive of the capability of culture.
+They go on to say: "We are fully persuaded that improvement
+equal to that which we have witnessed in
+the case of these children of the plains, if made in equal
+time by American children, would be regarded as quite
+unusual. And when the difficulty of communication
+consequent upon the diversities of language is taken
+into account we can but feel that the results of which
+we have been the witnesses to-day justify our judgment
+of them as amazing."</p>
+
+<p>One of the most interesting features connected with
+the attempts to educate the Indians at Carlisle is the
+'School News,' a little publication which, as I understand,
+is conducted by Indian pupils taught in the
+establishment, edited by Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee
+Indian boy. It is published once a month, and costs
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span>
+25 cents or 1<i>s.</i> per year. It takes as its motto the
+lines:</p>
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poem">
+<p class="o1">"A pebble cast into the sea is felt from shore to shore,</p>
+<p>A thought from the mind set free will echo on for ever more."</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Perhaps neither the metre nor the actual statement
+commend themselves to acceptance, but the
+matter of the little journal is full of interest. In the
+first place the names of the contributors afford full
+matter for meditation. Perhaps it is one of the steps
+which must be taken to civilise these poor Indians that
+their names should undergo a strange and, to me,
+unmeaning metamorphose. There seems no reason
+whatever why the Indian names should not be retained,
+or if there is any reason for changing them, at
+least there might be some discrimination and good
+taste exercised in the adoption of English Christian
+names.</p>
+
+<p>The first number of the 'School News,' which I have
+before me, contains as an article: "What Michael
+Burns, an Apache boy, thinks on the Indian Question."
+He says, "I cannot help myself, having much feeling for
+my people, what has been said about them, and the
+efforts making to give us the same privileges as the
+people of the United States. And it is said how
+we have been treated by the bad white man, for the
+last ten or fifteen years, decreasing our number. But
+that kind for treatment for my nation will soon stop."
+The poor boy goes on to say: "There is no doubt
+that we are in fault. We had the opinion that we
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span>
+could not get beaten by any other nation. Now we
+know for ourselves that we will have to change....
+But how does the white man know which way
+is the best to do. Was he born that way? No!
+Education gives him the light of knowledge." Then
+a boy named Marcus Poko writes to his father: "I
+want you to try hard and leave the Comanche way,
+and to find the white man's way." In the leading
+article, written, I presume, by Samuel Townsend, it is
+said: "Indian ways will never be good any more, it
+is all passed, gone away, and the other way is coming
+up to take the place. We shall all be glad when we
+all get into the civilised way of living, then the
+Indians will not make so much trouble for the
+American people. Some people say 'let the Indians
+get out of the way. There is no use in trying to
+advance them, kill them all they are like the wild
+animals deaf and dumb, they never will learn anything.
+We have already paid so much money for
+them they have never become civilised yet.' But all
+good people say, 'Oh, yes, give them an education and
+plenty of opportunities, and send more teachers among
+them so they may come up beside us and live as
+brothers and live in peace.'" There is a little paragraph
+as to language. "There are a great many words in
+the English," says the writer, "that the Indians have
+no word for, so the white people who make the Indian
+books have to make new Indian words. So the Indians
+have to learn the new Indian words. Now we don't
+know much about it, but we believe the Indians can
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span>
+all learn to speak the same as the whites." Then
+there is a column about the school news: "Lizzie
+McRae, a Creek girl, made a very good corn bread the
+other day. We had some of it. It was right good I
+tell you." "Robert American Horse is a steady boy.
+He works in the blacksmith shop very well, and Mr.
+Harris never has to tell him but once how to do something."
+"One of the teachers had artificial violets on her
+belt. A Gros Ventre boy saw them, but did not know
+what they were, so he got up from his desk and went
+close to the teacher. He looked at it and then smelt
+it. When he smelt it he said, 'Pooh! rags!'" "Boys,
+some time ago Captain Pratt gave us advice about
+throwing stones at birds. Some of the boys who
+understand most English did not listen. We want
+the birds to come and stay with us and sing for
+us, too. Let us remember about this, and not let
+Captain Pratt have to say it again." "Last Sunday
+some of the large girls had a prayer-meeting in the
+yard at the back of the girls' quarters. Nobody told
+them to do it, but they thought it would be a good
+thing." There is a long letter from Lizzie Walton, a
+Pawnee girl of thirteen years old, describing a trip to
+Philadelphia, and I believe there are very few girls of
+thirteen years of age in any school who could write
+more amusingly or better. The account of a magic
+lantern by Ada Bent, a Cheyenne girl, closes the
+number.</p>
+
+<p>Letters from the children who are sent out to the
+farmers are published in this little periodical, and give
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span>
+a very pleasing picture of the lives and aptitudes of
+these Indians. Virginia, of Kiowar, writes from a farm,
+asking one of the teachers to pardon her for not having
+done so before; but "I have not much time," she says,
+"I am very busy set the table and wash dishes make
+my bed and make pies and cakes and try to make
+bread too, and the other things beside.... Sometime
+I make fire and bring in wood. Mrs. Borton is very
+kind lady she has two children one girl and boy. I
+love these little children very much." "My dear
+Miss H&mdash;&mdash;, I am not bad a girl. I help now a great
+deal. I pray for you almost every night, also when I
+wake up in the morning. I like to pray very much
+because I make myself good." And so on in a pleasant
+little gossiping way, frequently in very difficult language.
+There is an article in the 'School News' of
+July upon the shooting of President Garfield: "The
+man who shot him," says the writer, "we suppose,
+thought he would please some of the people in the
+United States. He thought he was very smart. If
+President were to die how would every white man,
+black man and the Indian feel? It was not in war
+when the President was shot, for our country don't
+have war any more, but in peace.... We all feel
+sorry because the President is suffering. We hope he
+will soon recover." It is stated that about a hundred
+boys and girls have gone out to work on the
+farms, and there are some trite remarks about the
+advantages of hard work as opposed to the disadvantages
+of laziness. "The farmers up country say
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span>
+the Indian boys can bind wheat first-rate." "Nelly
+Cook, Sioux, made 36 sheets in one day last week.
+Nellie Cary, Apache, made 32, and Ella Moore, Creek,
+made 30. Boys, do you think those girls are lazy?"
+The 'School News' has a reporter, it would appear,
+for the paper says that "Our reporter took a walk
+round in the shops to see what the boys were doing.
+In all the shops every boy was busy. In the carpenter
+shop there were Jock (Arapahoe), Ralph
+(Sioux), Elwood (Iowa), and Joe Gun (Ponca) sawing
+out window and door frames. Oscar (Cheyenne) and
+Michael Burns (Apache) were busy carving balcony
+posts; and Lester (Arapahoe) was outside chiselling
+a beam. These things are all for our new hospital....
+Jesse (Arapahoe) and Little Elk (Cheyenne) were busy
+in the gymnasium. The waggons which Robert
+American Horse has finished painting are to be sent
+to Oregon and Washington Territories." It is sometimes
+difficult to make out the meaning of the little
+prattle which these small people commit to the uncertain
+medium of the English tongue; but, on the
+whole, it is a most interesting and curious study. In
+one respect these children of the forest possess that
+which civilisation seems rather to dwarf amongst men of
+the highest culture and imagination&mdash;a certain stately
+eloquence and nobility of expression, in which natural
+images abound, and allegory and metaphor consort
+together in excellent and tasteful union. In a paper
+called 'Eadle Keatah Toh,' which seems to have been
+the precursor of the 'School News,' there is an interesting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span>
+report from the Committee on Indian Affairs to
+the House of Representatives, submitted by Mr. Pound.
+The motto of the paper is "God helps those who help
+themselves"; but surely it might be better put that God
+will help those who seek to do good to the unfortunate
+Indians, who in contact with civilisation are rendered
+utterly helpless, and who in their attempts to help themselves
+according to the manner of the race must meet with
+nothing but extinction. From time to time there are
+notices of deaths. One would like to know who wrote
+the account of the "death of John Renville, son of
+Gabriel Renville, Chief of the Sisseton Sioux." After
+noticing the circumstances under which he contracted
+his fatal illness&mdash;fever, produced by drinking water
+at a spring on a hot day on a march to the camp in
+Perry County, the writer says:&mdash;"'Death loves a
+shining mark,' the poet sang long ago; and in the
+passing away of John Renville from our school we
+sadly say, how truthfully the poet sang....
+Through all the days of his sickness his large sorrowful
+eyes had a far-away wondering look, no pain
+marred the beauty of his brow, and his voice as he
+addressed his sister, who tenderly watched over him,
+was like the trumpet warbling of some mournful bird.
+Our hearts follow the father in deep sympathy as he
+bears back the body of his beautiful boy to the land
+of the Dakotas for burial."</p>
+
+<p>The Indian chiefs have a right, which they often
+exercise, of visiting these schools as a Board; and
+there is an account in the Carlisle paper of the visit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span>
+of Spotted Tail, Iron Wing, White Thunder, Black
+Crow, and Louis Robideau from the Rosebud Agency;
+Red Cloud, American Horse, Red Dog, Red Shirt,
+Little Wound, and Two Strike from the Pine Ridge
+Agency; Like the Bear and Medicine Bull from
+the Lower Brule Agency; Son of the Star, Poor
+Wolf, Peter Beauchamp, and John Smith from
+Fort Berthold; Two Bears, John Big Head, Grass,
+Thunder Hawk, and Louis Primeau from Standing
+Rock; Charger and Bull Eagle from Cheyenne
+River; Brother to All and James Broadhead from
+Crow Creek; Strike the Ree and Jumping Thunder
+from Yankton; Robert Hakewashte and Eli Abraham
+from Santee Agency; Mr. Tackett and his wife
+and daughter; a daughter of Spotted Tail, and
+others. The meeting of the children with their
+parents is described as being most touching; and
+sometimes the pupils were not recognised, so greatly
+had they altered. As the chiefs seemed unwilling to
+speak when called upon to do so, there was silence for
+a time till a little girl, who had been about a year and
+a half at the school, expressed her desire to speak in so
+earnest a way that General Marshall permitted her to
+do so; and so, speaking in her own dialect, her words were
+translated into English and into Sioux. She declared
+that she liked the white man's ways and the white man's
+language. Indian words, she said, were down on the
+ground, but the white man's language was in his head.
+The chiefs, who listened attentively, seemed to understand
+this curious figure of speech, and nodded their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span>
+approval. And then she enlarged upon the advantage
+of what she learned, and implored the chiefs to send
+their children to the school, where she says she is
+going to try to be God's daughter. Her words seemed
+to kindle the fire within the chieftains' breasts, for Like
+the Bear, a Sioux, and father of one of the boys at
+Hampton School, came forward and addressed the
+meeting. "There is no greater power in the world,"
+said he, "than the Great Spirit, and we must listen to
+Him and do what He wants us to do. When the men
+who were sent out by the Great Father the President
+asked for my children I gave them up. I see you are
+making brains for my children, and you are making
+eyes for them so that they can see. That is what I
+thank the Great Spirit for, and it is that which will
+make me strong." Then Robert Hakewashte, a chief
+from the Santee Agency, spoke, and said that he wanted
+schools like that which he saw here on his own reservation,
+and Spotted Tail wished for the same thing.
+"Since I have learned the words of God," he says, "it
+makes no difference to me what is the colour of a man's
+skin; if he walks like a man it is the same. I do not
+believe God likes the white colour only. God likes
+red and white, for He made them all." And then the
+flood of eloquence was loosened, and an old chief of the
+Sioux, nearly blind, verging on ninety years of age,
+who had come to see his grandson, said: "I grew up a
+red man, and the things I see here I never had a chance
+to see before. I have heard about the white man's
+church and his religion, and I have heard about the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span>
+holy house. I have looked into them, and I am very
+much pleased. But there is only one Great Spirit we
+all can worship, and the red men all over the country
+are hearing about it. You are teaching the children
+to worship the Great Spirit. That is a great thing,
+and I like it. But you have here two sons of one
+father. One is sick. I want you to keep the other."
+And so he carried him away.</p>
+
+<p>The condition of the Red Man who is allowed to exist
+under the banner of the Republic is a subject which
+has attracted the attention of the best and wisest men
+in the United States. The treatment of the Indians
+is a question of future policy. It is one which must
+exercise a very deep and abiding influence on the whole
+history of an ancient and interesting people. But it is
+exceedingly difficult to put in a short compass its most
+salient points before those who are unacquainted with
+the nature of the problems to be solved. Comparisons
+are odious, above all places, in America, when they
+are not to the advantage of the Great Republic, and
+I shall not draw any between the state of the Indian
+tribes in Canada and in the States. But it may be
+fairly admitted that the Indian Question in Canada
+is divested of many of the difficulties which surround
+it south of the lakes. The people of Canada have far
+more land than they know what to do with. They
+are a sparse population. They are not impelled
+to fierce adventures by mining "booms," and they
+are altogether less progressive than their American
+brethren. Shall we say that they are more charitable,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
+more humane, less greedy of other men's goods? I do
+not say so. But at all events it is perfectly true that
+the Red Man, although he is dying out under the
+influence of whiskey and other influences which need
+not be particularised, in his native land, lives in comparative
+peace and comfort under the British flag in
+Canada. He is content with the White Mother. He
+pursues the occupations dear to his race as a hunter
+and as a fisherman. He is a dealer in peltries, and in
+such small barter as his needs require. He is the
+companion of sportsmen, and he delights, free as mountain
+air, to hunt on the hillside and in the prairie in
+winter over the vast ranges of snowy fields which in
+the few short months of spring and summer teem with
+flowers, and the frosty lakes which yield fish to his spear
+and net. There are few or no railways through his
+reservations to vex his repose, no great trains of miners
+with pick and rifle to drive away the moose and the
+buffalo, and hand the native hunter over to starvation.
+The Indian gives to the white man all he needs, and
+aids him in obtaining from the wide stretch of land
+over which he roams all the wealth that it can afford.
+Practically one part of the Dominion is handed over
+to the Red Man and to the half-breeds, for there
+is an Indian frontier which as yet has not been much
+encroached upon by any large migration of whites.
+As far as I know, conflicts north of the Saint Lawrence
+between Indians and whites are unknown, or have not
+been heard of for very many years. South of the great
+lakes, in the wonderful land over which is displayed the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span>
+banner of the stars and stripes, the fate of the Indian
+is very different. In the words of Mr. Carl Schurz,
+himself an expert in the question, "the history of the
+relations of the United States with the Red Man
+presents in great part a record of broken treaties, of
+unjust wars and of cruel spoliation." That is a sweeping
+statement, which it would be just as well for an
+Englishman not to make, but coming from the mouth
+of an American citizen and of a United States Minister
+with plenty of evidence to back it, there can be no
+harm in recording my conviction of its truth. It is
+but another indictment against a defect in the form of
+government which Americans exalt as the most perfect
+of human institutions, that the central government
+made treaties in good faith with the Indian tribes, but
+was unable to enforce their obligations or to maintain
+their integrity. There is, as all well-informed people
+know&mdash;well informed, at least, in reference to American
+affairs&mdash;a commissioner who makes an annual report
+to the Secretary of the Interior respecting the Indian
+tribes in the various locations over the Union and
+the Territories. The last of these reports which I
+have seen is that of the Acting Commissioner Mr.
+Marble, addressed to the Department of the Interior
+from the office of Indian Affairs at Washington in the
+November of last year. The volume contains the
+reports of the agents in the Indian Territory; of the
+schools for Indian children established in pursuance of
+a wise and humane policy, and detailed statistics in
+relation to the Indian settlements and reservations, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span>
+latter indeed forming by far the largest portion of the
+volume of 400 pages. Before I call attention to the
+condition of the Indians, and the efforts made to save
+them from extinction or from a degradation worse than
+annihilation, I should like to direct the attention of
+those who are interested in the subject to the view
+which is beginning to find favour, I believe, among
+the most experienced men in the States, that the
+system of "Reservations" is founded on a mistake the
+magnitude of which is demonstrated every day, and that
+the only means of saving the Indians from extinction
+is their gradual absorption as educated communities in
+the agricultural life of the nation, keeping them far
+as may be from the white man, but making no other
+distinction between them and the other citizens of the
+United States than such as must be found in the nature
+of the Indian race and their degree of culture and civilisation&mdash;treating
+them, in fact, as communities of
+Mennonites, Mormons, or Norwegians, or other nationalities
+would be treated in the United States. When
+the Reservations were first established it was considered
+impossible that the migration of the whites
+would extend to the remote regions of the west to
+which the unfortunate survivors of the people with
+whose virtues and vices Cooper and other novelists
+have made us familiar were gradually and often remorselessly
+driven. It is a plea which will be urged in
+bar of judgment that the doctrine of States Rights
+prevented the interference of the United States Government
+on behalf of the Indian tribes who were often
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span>
+ruthlessly destroyed. But it will scarcely be a plea,
+I think, which humanity in full court would recognise
+as valid. <i>Homo homini lupus.</i> But to the Red Man
+as to the Black in many cases the White Man is worse
+than any wolf; far more bloodthirsty and rapacious
+than any tiger&mdash;a Cain of Cains. It was our own kith
+and kin who, landing on the shores of the North
+American continent, encroaching by degrees upon the
+tribes and at last encountering their hostility, spread
+their sway literally by fire and sword, and rooted out
+the Red Man wherever they found him established on
+land or by sea which they coveted. We, whose countrymen
+have worked out the same policy on the Australian
+continent and Van Diemen's Land, and who can only
+be restrained from its pursuit in New Zealand by the
+strong arm of the Home Government, can scarcely
+afford to take up stones to fling at our American
+brethren; and it is not with any purpose of indictment
+or accusation that I proceed to make a few remarks
+on the relations of the United States Government with
+the Red Man, and the efforts which they have been
+making to compensate the Indians in some measure
+for the injustice and persecution dealt out for many
+a generation.</p>
+
+<p>As I looked at the men gathered at some of the
+railroad stations in the western desert and thought
+of the Red Men whose fate it is to meet such representatives
+of civilisation and Christianity, I could not
+but be filled with pity for the unfortunates and with
+wonder at "the dispensation" under which they live.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span>
+The faces are fine and bold enough, bearded to the
+cheek or shaved in the American fashion, with bold
+staring eyes, which "look square" in your own, with
+a general expression "Do you want a fight?" in them&mdash;the
+heads to which they belong are generally set on
+muscular bodies. If a gang of these men think fit to
+go on to an Indian reservation&mdash;the very name is too
+often a bitter mockery&mdash;who is to stop them? If the
+Indians try to do so and one of the white intruders is
+killed the country-side rings with cries of "vengeance
+for the massacre of our brethren," and all the papers are
+filled with accounts of "Another Indian Outbreak."</p>
+
+<p>"The average frontier-man in the States looks," as
+Mr. Schurz says, "upon the Indian merely as a
+nuisance in his way. There are many whom it would
+be difficult to convince that it is a crime to kill an
+Indian." I will go further and say that there are
+many, I believe, who would take great pleasure in killing
+an Indian whenever they could; or as one gentleman
+observed to me, and I believe in his relations with
+white men no more just or honourable man or more
+humane could be found, "I would sooner kill an Indian
+than I would a skunk." When I was in the West,
+there was a cry raised that the Utes were about to
+wage war, and appeals appeared in the local papers
+for a military force to march against them. Their
+leaders were accused of arrogance and of insolence,
+and of murderous designs, and the general remark
+one heard was, "The Utes must go." I inquired a
+little into the matter when I got back, and I found
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span>
+that the Utes were strictly and absolutely, in their
+own right, standing upon the titles, which they had
+derived from the United States Government, to the
+lands from which they were required to move. These
+lands were wanted. Other lands were pointed out to
+them, to which they objected, and then they were
+informed that they would be moved by force, and preparations
+were made to levy war against these unfortunates,
+if they resisted deportation from the territory
+which had been assigned to them by the Great Father.
+Had they been Irish landlords, they could not have
+been treated worse; but in the West not one word
+was raised in favour of their claims.</p>
+
+<p>The first point which has to be considered is, that
+the Indian is obnoxious to the very class of men with
+whom he is by the necessity of things most closely
+brought in contact. The railway has been the great
+persecutor of Red Men. It has driven away the game,
+it has carried in proximity to their reservations all the
+enterprise charged with whiskey, revolver, rifle, and
+greed, which can be furnished by the offscourings of
+the world. In the Far West the miners in advance
+throng into the valleys, and break the silence of the
+mountain-ranges by the sound of their picks, the cattle-raisers
+spread out over the plains, the ploughman settles
+down on the fertile land. "What," asks the American
+philanthropist, and his question is echoed all over the
+world by humane and good men, "what is to become
+of the Indian?" The hunting-grounds are gradually
+being pushed farther west and north until they are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span>
+bounded by the sea, and by the eternal snow. And if
+by any chance it should be found that there is gold or
+lead, silver or iron, or copper, or coal in any abundance,
+even under these unpromising conditions it will be
+sought. The buffalo is disappearing fast, faster than
+the Indian himself. Deer are becoming scarcer every
+year. What is to be left for the Red Man? Pastoral
+life and agriculture, say the philanthropists. The
+substitution, however, is not so easy. The weakness
+of the United States Government is the main cause
+why the policy of reservations has failed. Let us
+take the account of it by a United States Minister.
+"The Government," says Mr. Schurz, "has tried to
+protect the Indians in good faith against encroachments,
+and has failed. It has yielded to the pressure
+exercised upon it by people in immediate contact
+with the Indians. When a collision between Indians
+and whites once occurred, no matter who was responsible
+for it, our military forces were always found
+on the side of the white against the savage. How
+was Government to proclaim that white men should
+for ever be excluded from the millions of acres covered
+by Indian reservations, and that the national power
+would be exerted to do so?" Such an idea the American
+Minister thinks would be utterly preposterous. The
+rough and ready frontier-man would pick quarrels
+with the Indians; the speculators would urge him on.
+Government could not prevent collisions; the conflict
+once brought on, Government, in spite of its good
+intentions and sense of justice, would find itself employing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span>
+its forces to hunt down the Indian. The old
+story would be repeated, as it will be wherever, says
+Mr. Schurz, there is a large and valuable Indian Reservation
+surrounded by white settlements, "and unjust,
+disgraceful as it is, that is an inevitable result."
+Such being the case then, the United States Government
+being powerless to see that right shall be done,
+and it being at once a human and a Christian duty to
+avert, if possible, the extinction of the original possessors
+of this grand continent, let us see what can be
+done to carry out the object. Fit the Indians, it is
+said, for the habits and occupations of civilised life;
+give them individual possession of land as property,
+a fee-simple title to the fields they cultivate, guarded
+by an absolute prohibition of sale&mdash;because it has been
+found that whenever the Indians are exposed to the
+temptation of artful traders, they will be cajoled out
+of the titles they have to their land&mdash;and you will save
+the remnants from utter destruction. I hope it will
+be so. I could not but feel a glow of enthusiasm when
+I heard the Attorney-General, Mr. MacVeagh, at
+Washington, speaking incidentally one day about some
+railway matter, declare that he would not sanction
+the making of a line of railway through Indian Territory
+until he was satisfied that the Indians actually
+understood the conditions which had been offered to
+them by the company. "I will," said Mr. MacVeagh,
+"send down government agents there to ascertain
+that the Indians thoroughly understand what they are
+doing, and that it is of their own free will and consent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span>
+that the railway passes through their territory in exchange
+for the money and goods they receive for the
+concession." Excellent and just minister! But, alas!
+I believe that ere I left the United States the whole
+thing was done; the railway company had declared
+that they would, whether or no, make their line, and
+if an Indian touched a hair of the head of any white
+man, the United States Government would not be able
+to avert the Divine wrath of every white man on the
+border from the whole of the tribe. Well may Mr.
+Schurz say that the thought of exterminating a race
+once the only occupants of the soil, where so many
+millions of our own people have flourished, must be
+revolting to every American who is not devoid of all
+sentiments of justice and humanity. Extermination
+or civilisation is the alternative offered to the Indian.
+Now let us see how it is proposed to civilise them.
+According to the returns in the Report for 1880, the
+number of Indians in the United States, exclusive of
+those in Alaska, is 256,127. Of these, 138,642 are
+described as wearing citizen's dress. It will be observed
+that there is no estimate given of the Indians who
+do not wear citizen's dress under this head. Citizens
+must be sometimes very badly dressed indeed if the
+Indians I saw at various stations along the line to San
+Francisco in shocking bad hats and tattered clothes were
+to be included amongst those who figured under this
+description in the report of the Commissioner. About
+17,000 houses are reported as occupied. There are
+224 schools, attended by 6000 scholars for a month
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span>
+or more during the year, scattered over the continent.
+About 34,550 Indians could read. There were 154
+church buildings and 74 missionaries. The number of
+children of school age was 34,541; but this was an
+under estimate. Of these there was only school accommodation
+for 9972. The total amount expended for
+education during the year by the United States Government
+was $249,299; by the State of New York,
+$15,863; by the State of Pennsylvania, $325; by
+other States, nothing; by religious societies, $46,933;
+by tribal funds, $7481. 22,048 Indian families were
+engaged in cultivating farms or small patches of
+ground; 33,125 male Indians were labouring in civilised
+pursuits; and 358 Indian apprentices had been
+pursuing trades during the year. This census and
+these statistics are stated to be imperfect, and it would
+require a close examination of the returns to enable an
+inquirer to form any idea as to the progress made in
+the direction which we are told is the alternative of
+destruction.</p>
+
+<p>The Reservations of the various Indian tribes are
+scattered irregularly over the United States; from
+Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota on the north and
+north-west, away to the Territories on the other side of
+the Rocky Mountains, down to New Mexico and Arizona,
+there being none in the southern states bordering the
+Atlantic. But there are Red Men of different tribes
+located, as the Americans would say, in the States to the
+east, such as New York. The Reservations are of irregular
+size and extent. Isabella, in the State of Maine,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span>
+reserved for 848 Indians, lies to the east of 86° longitude,
+and south of 44° latitude. There is a considerable
+group of Reservations on the western shore of
+Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, and in Minnesota. But
+the proper Indian territory lies west of Arkansas,
+with the Red River on the south, New Mexico on
+the west, and Kansas on the north; and in it are
+concentrated the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chicasaws,
+Comanches, Cheyennes, and several other tribes. The
+Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and Arizona ranks
+perhaps next in size, extending northwards into
+Colorado, where the Utes have got a large tract of
+land assigned to them upon what appears now to
+be very doubtful or vanishing tenure. These, and
+numerous reservations, which it would be tedious to
+enumerate, are under the charge of agents appointed
+by the Government at Washington, as to whose
+functions and personal character and attainments one
+hears very surprising and contradictory reports. But
+I confess, from a perusal of the documents which they
+have furnished to the head of the Department, and
+which are published in the Annual Report, there
+seems to me no just ground for imputing to these
+gentlemen want of zeal, knowledge, interest, or
+intelligence. Those who detest the whole work of
+saving the Red Man are very apt to impute to the
+Indian agents not only corrupt practices in relation to
+the sale of government stores and supplies destined
+for the use of those under their charge, but illicit
+traffic in spirits, which is ruinous to the Red Man,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span>
+and even some participation in the acts of violence
+which have frequently led to Indian troubles. It all
+depends upon the manner in which your informant in
+the States regards the Indian Question whether the
+agents are described as scoundrels whom no man could
+trust, or as gentlemen of high propriety and general
+excellence.</p>
+
+<p>The necessities which have been imposed by advancing
+civilisation of providing Indians with food
+entail a heavy outlay upon the United States Government,
+which is much begrudged by large sections of
+members of Congress, although they do not see their way
+clearly to withhold supplies of food from the unfortunate
+people whose hunting-grounds have been occupied,
+and who have not yet learned the arts of agriculture,
+so as to be able to supply themselves with food. The
+transportation of stores, the cost of beef, corn, coffee,
+bread, tobacco, tea; in fact, all kinds of food, woollen
+goods, clothing, boots, hats, groceries, waggons, tools,
+hardware, and medical supplies,&mdash;all these duly figure
+in the estimates of the Indian Commissioner to a very
+considerable amount, and the returns as yet do not
+present any large reduction on the annual charge;
+although nearly all the agents speak in terms of great
+hopefulness of the extraordinary advance which has
+been made in their agencies in the cultivation of the
+soil.</p>
+
+<p>One remarkable division of the agencies has reference
+to their appropriation to religious denominations.
+An Indian might well be puzzled as to his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span>
+form of belief if he were passed through the various
+agencies, attending at each a religious service or two,
+and listening to the teaching of the various divines
+attached to them. The Society of Friends have
+control of the belief and religious teaching of the
+Sante and Nemaja Indians in Nebraska, and of the
+Pawnees in the Indian Territory; to the Methodists
+are assigned three tribes in California, three tribes in
+Washington Territory, two in Oregon, three in Montana,
+two in Idaho, and one in Michigan. The Nevada
+Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chicasaws, and Seminoles
+are handed over to the Baptists. The Presbyterians
+have charge of the Nezpercès in Idaho, Umtas in
+Utah; the Apaches, Pueblos, and two other tribes
+in New Mexico. The Congregational Church exercises
+its religious offices among the tribes in Wisconsin,
+among two tribes in Dacotah, and one in Washington
+Territory. The Reformed Church has its work
+cut out for it in Arizona amongst four tribes. The
+Protestant Episcopal Church exercises its jurisdiction
+over one tribe in Minnesota, six tribes in Dacotah, one
+in Indian Territory, and one in Wyoming. The Unitarians
+have apparently only one tribe in teaching, the
+Los Pinos in Colorado. The United Presbyterians have
+one tribe in Oregon; the Christian Union has another
+in Oregon; the Evangelical Lutheran has charge of the
+Southern Utes in Colorado; and lastly, the Roman
+Catholic Church has two tribes in Washington Territory,
+two in Oregon, one in Montana, and two in Dacotah.
+As a general rule, the reports of the missionaries
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span>
+themselves are more sanguine, as they are wont to be,
+than are those of disinterested, perhaps unprejudiced,
+observers of their work. But, as is natural, the actual
+progress made depends very much, not only upon the
+nature of the tribe among whom the work is carried
+on, but on the character of the missionary, and on his
+ability and energy. In some instances, I see the condition
+of a tribe is reported as being lamentable,
+from a religious point of view, whilst in a neighbouring
+reservation, it is stated that great progress has
+been made in the establishment of religious teaching
+and ideas. The Rosebud Agency is said to prosper in
+the hands of one reverend gentlemen; the fathers of
+St. Ignatius are described as doing good work amongst
+the Flatheads; the Pawnees are left without any missionaries
+at all, and, says the government report, "are
+probably better off without them." And depreciatory
+remarks are slightingly introduced concerning the work
+at other agencies. On the Devil's Lake Agency, the majority
+of the adults shun the missionaries as they
+would the gentleman who may be supposed to own the
+lake by the sides of which they are encamped. The
+Jesuit fathers and the Catholic sisters are described
+as working generally with zeal and success, whilst one
+agency assigned to the Methodists is said to have
+no religious agency at all. It is to the success of
+the attempts made to educate the Indians at the
+public establishments that the philanthropist and
+humanitarian must look with the most hopefulness.</p>
+
+<p>All the reports of the teachers and visitors of these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span>
+schools coincide in one point, that the young Indian
+is most teachable, and that in respect of acquiring
+knowledge he is, if anything, the superior of the white,
+who seems to enjoy no hereditary excellence in his
+capacity for acquiring knowledge. The Bill to which
+the Report was an introduction may be considered
+indeed as the Magna Charta of the Indian tribes if
+it be followed up by judicious treatment, and careful
+management of and consideration for the rights conferred
+upon these tribes as preliminary to their absorption
+as citizens in the mass of the nation, when
+they are fit for such an amalgamation with the white
+races. The advance of the United States westwards
+has left vacant many military posts and barracks,
+stranded, as it were, high and dry in the midst of
+the torrent of civilisation. Fort Bridger, Wyoming;
+Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania; Fort Craig, New
+Mexico; Fort Cummings, in the same territory, and
+a number of others, have been named as suitable for
+the purpose of educating the Indian children; and it
+was in pursuance of the measure recommended to Congress
+that the various agencies throughout the Indian
+Territories were directed to forward children whom
+their parents might wish to entrust to the officers of
+the United States for education. "Received in the
+rudest state of savagism," says the Report, "their progress
+is already most remarkable." I have already
+remarked that the health of the boys is not generally
+satisfactory. Their sanitary condition is bad; and it
+would appear that sometimes in these long and tedious
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span>
+journeyings from the remote Indian agencies the poor
+children suffer much.</p>
+
+<p>Even at the present moment the Anglo-Saxon
+appears to be dealing with the Maori in New Zealand
+very much as he has dealt with the native in Tasmania
+and in Australia. The history of our relations with
+the New Zealand chiefs and people is not in a nature
+to enable us to throw stones at the Americans with
+impunity, for the glass house in which we live can
+very easily be reached. Some sixteen or seventeen
+years ago a rebellion, arising out of the aggressions of
+the white settlers on the lands of the Maori, was
+averted by a Proclamation and by Acts confiscating
+a large tract of Tallinassey, which became theoretically
+the property of the Crown. Of course the
+natives had as little to say to that as the lady who is
+mentioned in 'Tristram Shandy' had with the declaration
+that "she was not related to her own child."
+But they did not recognise the occupancy, and whenever
+a white man settled upon a portion of the ground
+they pulled down his fences and removed his landmarks.
+The contest is still going on, but no one who
+is acquainted with the history of the colony will doubt
+what the end will be; and it is coming soon, or it is
+to come, the moment the colonists are bent upon
+taking the land, and when it is desired to do so.</p>
+
+<p>"It but feebly expresses the judgment formed from
+what we have observed to say that we regard the experiment
+made in this school to educate and improve
+Indian children as in every way a very remarkable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span>
+success." <i>Si sic omnes!</i> Why does not the United
+States Government, or if not the Government, the
+people, abounding in wealth, full of pious impulses,
+humane, charitable, who justly say that the worst use
+you can make of an Indian is to hang him; why do
+not the political economists who declare that it costs a
+million of dollars to get rid of an Indian with gunpowder
+and lead; why do not the enterprising and
+wealthy capitalists who desire to appropriate Indian
+Reservations all combine to extend the work of these
+schools so as to absorb all that remains of the Red
+Man in the rising generation amongst the citizens of
+the great Republic? A blessed work, worthy of an
+imperial State, truly great and truly good!</p>
+
+<p class="center p4">THE END.</p>
+<hr class="l30 p4" />
+
+<p class="center s08">LONDON:<br />
+
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED.<br />
+
+STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2 class="fntitle">FOOTNOTES</h2>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_A" id="Footnote_A" href="#FNanchor_A"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> How Mr. Garrett executed his mission and killed the Kid is
+narrated in the account of the desperados of the West, which forms a
+separate chapter.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_B" id="Footnote_B" href="#FNanchor_B"><span class="label">[B]</span></a>The day of our departure from the United States, after the visit
+of which I have been giving the details, was the date of a great crime,
+of which we were then ignorant. About the very time that we were
+on our way to the wharf to embark on board the "<i>City of Berlin</i>," the
+murderer of the President was accomplishing his purpose. But with
+all the means and appliances which exist for the despatch of news,
+I believe that the commission of the crime was not known till the
+steamer had passed out to sea from the Sand Heads.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_C" id="Footnote_C" href="#FNanchor_C"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> <i>See also</i> Rose Library.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C1" id="Page_C1">1</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center p6"><i>A Catalogue of American and Foreign Books Published or
+Imported by</i> <span class="smcap">Messrs. Sampson Low &amp; Co.</span> <i>can
+be had on application.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>Crown Buildings, 188, Fleet Street, London,<br />
+January, 1881.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="b12">A Selection from the List of Books</span><br />
+
+PUBLISHED BY<br />
+
+<span class="b12">SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="l05" />
+<p class="center">ALPHABETICAL LIST.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">
+<i>A Classified Educational Catalogue of Works</i> published
+in Great Britain. Demy 8vo, cloth extra. Second Edition,
+revised and corrected to Christmas, 1879, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>About Some Fellows.</i> By an <span class="smcap">Eton Boy</span>, Author of "A Day
+of my Life." Cloth limp, square 16mo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Adventures of Captain Mago.</i> A Ph&oelig;nician's Explorations
+1000 years <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> By <span class="smcap">Leon Cahun</span>. Numerous Illustrations. Crown
+8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Adventures of a Young Naturalist.</i> By <span class="smcap">Lucien Biart</span>, with
+117 beautiful Illustrations on Wood. Edited and adapted by <span class="smcap">Parker
+Gillmore</span>. Post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, New Edition, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Afghan Knife (The).</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Robert Armitage
+Sterndale</span>, Author of "Seonee." Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>After Sundown; or, The Palette and the Pen.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. W. Fenn</span>,
+Author of "Blind-Man's Holiday," &amp;c. With Portrait of Author.
+2 vols., crown 8vo, cloth extra, 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Albania: A Narrative of Recent Travel.</i> By <span class="smcap">E. F. Knight</span>.
+With some very good Illustrations specially made for the work.
+Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Alcott (Louisa M.) Jimmy's Cruise in the "Pinafore."</i> With 9
+Illustrations. Second Edition. Small post 8vo, cloth gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Aunt Jo's Scrap-Bag.</i> Square 16mo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+(Rose Library, 1<i>s.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo's Boys.</i> Small
+post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Rose Library, Double vol. 2<i>s.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Women.</i> 1 vol., cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Rose
+Library, 2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C2" id="Page_C2">2</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Old-Fashioned Girl.</i> Best Edition, small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Rose Library, 2<i>s.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Work and Beginning Again.</i> A Story of Experience.
+1 vol., small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i> Several Illustrations. (Rose
+Library, 2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Shawl Straps.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Eight Cousins; or, the Aunt Hill.</i> Small post 8vo,
+with Illustrations, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Rose in Bloom.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra,
+3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Silver Pitchers.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Under the Lilacs.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Jack and Jill.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"Miss Alcott's stories are thoroughly healthy, full of racy fun and humour ...
+exceedingly entertaining.... We can recommend the 'Eight Cousins.'"&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Alpine Ascents and Adventures; or, Rock and Snow Sketches.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">H. Schütz Wilson</span>, of the Alpine Club. With Illustrations by
+<span class="smcap">Whymper</span> and <span class="smcap">Marcus Stone</span>. Crown 8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 2nd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Andersen (Hans Christian) Fairy Tales.</i> With Illustrations in
+Colours by E. V. B. Royal 4to, cloth, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Architecture (The Twenty Styles of).</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">W. Wood</span>, Author
+of "The Hundred Greatest Men." Imperial 8vo, with 52 Plates.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Art Education.</i> <i>See</i> "Illustrated Text Books."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Autobiography of Sir G. Gilbert Scott, R.A., F.S.A., &amp;c.</i>
+Edited by his Son, <span class="smcap">G. Gilbert Scott</span>. With an Introduction by the
+<span class="smcap">Dean of Chichester</span>, and a Funeral Sermon, preached in Westminster
+Abbey, by the <span class="smcap">Dean of Westminster</span>. Also, Portrait on
+steel from the portrait of the Author by <span class="smcap">G. Richmond</span>, R.A. 1 vol.,
+demy 8vo, cloth extra, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="l30" />
+<p class="center b12">THE BAYARD SERIES,</p>
+
+<p class="center">Edited by the late <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>.<br />
+
+Comprising Pleasure Books of Literature produced in the Choicest Style as
+Companionable Volumes at Home and Abroad.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"We can hardly imagine better books for boys to read or for men to ponder
+over."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review"><i>Price 2s. 6d. each Volume, complete in itself, flexible cloth extra, gilt edges,
+with silk Headbands and Registers.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Story of the Chevalier Bayard.
+By M. De Berville.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">De Joinville's St. Louis, King of
+France.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Essays of Abraham Cowley, including
+all his Prose Works.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Abdallah; or, The Four Leaves.
+By Edouard Laboullaye.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C3" id="Page_C3">3</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Table-Talk and Opinions of Napoleon
+Buonaparte.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Vathek: An Oriental Romance.
+By William Beckford.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The King and the Commons. A
+Selection of Cavalier and Puritan
+Songs. Edited by Professor
+Morley.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Words of Wellington: Maxims and
+Opinions of the Great Duke.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Dr. Johnson's Rasselas, Prince of
+Abyssinia. With Notes.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Hazlitt's Round Table. With Biographical
+Introduction.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia,
+and the Letter to a Friend. By
+Sir Thomas Browne, Knt.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Ballad Poetry of the Affections. By
+Robert Buchanan.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Coleridge's Christabel, and other
+Imaginative Poems. With Preface
+by Algernon C. Swinburne.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Lord Chesterfield's Letters, Sentences,
+and Maxims. With Introduction
+by the Editor, and
+Essay on Chesterfield by M. de
+Ste.-Beuve, of the French Academy.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Essays in Mosaic. By Thos. Ballantyne.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">My Uncle Toby; his Story and his
+Friends. Edited by P. Fitzgerald.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Reflections; or, Moral Sentences and
+Maxims of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Socrates: Memoirs for English
+Readers from Xenophon's Memorabilia.
+By Edw. Levien.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Prince Albert's Golden Precepts.</p>
+
+<p class="center s08"><i>A Case containing 12 Volumes, price 31s. 6d.; or the Case separately, price 3s. 6d.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="l30" />
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Beauty and the Beast.</i> An Old Tale retold, with Pictures by
+E. V. B. 4to, cloth extra. 10 Illustrations in Colours. 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Begum's Fortune (The): A New Story.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>.
+Translated by <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. Numerous Illustrations.
+Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ.</i> By <span class="smcap">L. Wallace</span>. Crown
+8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Beumers' German Copybooks.</i> In six gradations at 4<i>d.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Biart (Lucien).</i> <i>See</i> "Adventures of a Young Naturalist,"
+"My Rambles in the New World," "The Two Friends," "Involuntary
+Voyage."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Bickersteth's Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer</i>
+may be had in various styles and bindings from 1<i>d.</i> to 21<i>s.</i> <i>Price
+List and Prospectus will be forwarded on application.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Bickersteth (Rev. E. H., M.A.) The Reef, and other Parables.</i>
+1 vol., square 8vo, with numerous very beautiful Engravings, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Clergyman in his Home</i>. Small post 8vo, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Master's Home-Call; or, Brief Memorials of</i>
+<i>Alice Frances Bickersteth</i>. 20th Thousand. 32mo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Master's Will</i>. A Funeral Sermon preached
+on the Death of Mrs. S. Gurney Buxton. Sewn, 6<i>d.</i>; cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C4" id="Page_C4">4</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Shadow of the Rock.</i> A
+Selection of Religious Poetry. 18mo, cloth extra, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Shadowed Home and the Light Beyond.</i> 7th
+Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Biographies of the Great Artists (Illustrated).</i> Each of the
+following Volumes is illustrated with from twelve to twenty full-page
+Engravings, printed in the best manner, and bound in ornamental
+cloth cover, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Library Edition, bound in a superior style,
+and handsomely ornamented, with gilt top; six Volumes, enclosed
+in a cloth case, with lid, £1 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each case.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Hogarth.</b></li>
+<li><b>Turner.</b></li>
+<li><b>Rubens.</b></li>
+<li><b>Holbein.</b></li>
+<li><b>Tintoretto.</b></li>
+<li><b>Little Masters of Germany.</b></li>
+<li><b>Fra Angelico and Masaccio.</b></li>
+<li><b>Fra Bartolommeo.</b></li>
+<li><b>Giotto.</b></li>
+<li><b>Raphael.</b></li>
+<li><b>Van Dyck and Hals.</b></li>
+<li><b>Titian.</b></li>
+<li><b>Rembrandt.</b></li>
+<li><b>Leonardo da Vinci.</b></li>
+<li><b>Gainsborough and Constable.</b></li>
+<li><b>Sir David Wilkie.</b></li>
+<li><b>Van Eyck.</b></li>
+<li><b>Figure Painters of Holland.</b></li>
+<li><b>Michel Angelo.</b></li>
+<li><b>Delaroche and Vernet.</b></li>
+<li><b>Landseer.</b></li>
+<li><b>Reynolds.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review">"Few things in the way of small books upon great subjects, avowedly cheap and
+necessarily brief, have been hitherto so well done as these biographies of the Great
+Masters in painting."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"A deserving series."&mdash;<i>Edinburgh Review.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"Most thoroughly and tastefully edited."&mdash;<i>Spectator.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Black (Wm.) Three Feathers.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart, and other Stories.</i> 1 vol.,
+small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Kilmeny: a Novel.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>In Silk Attire.</i> 3rd Edition, small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Daughter of Heth.</i> 11th Edition, small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Sunrise.</i> 15 Monthly Parts, 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Blackmore (R. D.) Lorna Doone.</i> 10th Edition, cr. 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Alice Lorraine.</i> 1 vol., small post 8vo, 6th Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Clara Vaughan.</i> Revised Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Cradock Nowell.</i> New Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Cripps the Carrier.</i> 3rd Edition, small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Mary Anerley.</i> New Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Erema; or, My Father's Sin.</i> With 12 Illustrations,
+small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Blossoms from the King's Garden: Sermons for Children.</i> By
+the Rev. <span class="smcap">C. Bosanquet.</span> 2nd Edition, small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Blue Banner (The); or, The Adventures of a Mussulman, a
+Christian, and a Pagan, in the time of the Crusades and Mongol
+Conquest.</i> Translated from the French of <span class="smcap">Leon Cahun</span>. With
+Seventy-six Wood Engravings. Imperial 16mo, cloth, gilt edges,
+7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C5" id="Page_C5">5</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Boy's Froissart (The).</i> 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>See</i> "Froissart."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Boy's King Arthur (The).</i> With very fine Illustrations.
+Square crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Sidney
+Lanier</span>, Editor of "The Boy's Froissart."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Brazil: the Amazons, and the Coast.</i> By <span class="smcap">Herbert H. Smith</span>.
+With 115 Full-page and other Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 650 pp., 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Brazil and the Brazilians.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. C. Fletcher</span> and <span class="smcap">D. P.
+Kidder</span>. 9th Edition, Illustrated, 8vo, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Breton Folk: An Artistic Tour in Brittany.</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry
+Blackburn</span>, Author of "Artists and Arabs," "Normandy Picturesque,"
+&amp;c. With 171 Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Randolph Caldecott</span>.
+Imperial 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Bricks without Straw.</i> By the Author of "A Fool's Errand."
+Crown 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>British Goblins: Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends,
+and Traditions.</i> By <span class="smcap">Wirt Sykes</span>, United States Consul for Wales.
+With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">J. H. Thomas</span>. This account of the Fairy
+Mythology and Folk-Lore of his Principality is, by permission, dedicated
+to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales. Second Edition. 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Buckle (Henry Thomas) The Life and Writings of.</i> By <span class="smcap">Alfred
+Henry Huth</span>. With Portrait. 2 vols., demy 8vo.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Burnaby (Capt.)</i> <i>See</i> "On Horseback."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Burnham Beeches (Heath, F. G.).</i> With numerous Illustrations
+and a Map. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Butler (W. F.) The Great Lone Land; an Account of the Red
+River Expedition, 1869-70.</i> With Illustrations and Map. Fifth and
+Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Wild North Land; the Story of a Winter Journey
+with Dogs across Northern North America.</i> Demy 8vo, cloth, with
+numerous Woodcuts and a Map, 4th Edition, 18<i>s.</i> Cr. 8vo, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.</i> Demy 8vo, cloth,
+2nd Edition, 16<i>s.</i> Also, in crown 8vo, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Cadogan (Lady A.) Illustrated Games of Patience.</i>
+Twenty-four Diagrams in Colours, with Descriptive Text. Foolscap
+4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 3rd Edition, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Caldecott (R.).</i> <i>See</i> "Breton Folk."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Celebrated Travels and Travellers.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Verne</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Changed Cross (The)</i>, and other Religious Poems. 16mo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Child of the Cavern (The); or, Strange Doings Underground.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>. Translated by <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. Numerous
+Illustrations. Sq. cr. 8vo, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cl., plain edges, 5<i>s.</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C6" id="Page_C6">6</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Child's Play</i>, with 16 Coloured Drawings by E. V. B. Printed
+on thick paper, with tints, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>New</i>. By E. V. B. Similar to the above. <i>See</i> New.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; A New and Cheap Edition of the two above, containing
+48 Illustrations by E. V. B., printed in tint, handsomely
+bound, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Children's Lives and How to Preserve Them; or, The Nursery
+Handbook.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Lomas, M.D.</span> Crown 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Choice Editions of Choice Books.</i> 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each, Illustrated by
+<span class="smcap">C. W. Cope</span>, R.A., <span class="smcap">T. Creswick</span>, R.A., <span class="smcap">E. Duncan</span>, <span class="smcap">Birket
+Foster</span>, <span class="smcap">J. C. Horsley</span>, A.R.A., <span class="smcap">G. Hicks</span>, <span class="smcap">R. Redgrave</span>, R.A.,
+<span class="smcap">C. Stonehouse</span>, <span class="smcap">F. Tayler</span>, <span class="smcap">G. Thomas</span>, <span class="smcap">H. J. Townshend</span>,
+<span class="smcap">E. H. Wehnert</span>, <span class="smcap">Harrison Weir</span>, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li>Bloomfield's Farmer's Boy.</li>
+<li>Campbell's Pleasures of Hope.</li>
+<li>Coleridge's Ancient Mariner.</li>
+<li>Goldsmith's Deserted Village.</li>
+<li>Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield.</li>
+<li>Gray's Elegy in a Churchyard.</li>
+<li>Keat's Eve of St. Agnes.</li>
+<li>Milton's L'Allegro.</li>
+<li>Poetry of Nature. Harrison Weir.</li>
+<li>Rogers' (Sam.) Pleasures of Memory.</li>
+<li>Shakespeare's Songs and Sonnets.</li>
+<li>Tennyson's May Queen.</li>
+<li>Elizabethan Poets.</li>
+<li>Wordsworth's Pastoral Poems.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review">"Such works are a glorious beatification for a poet."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Christ in Song.</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">Philip Schaff</span>. A New Edition,
+Revised, cloth, gilt edges, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cobbett</i> (<i>William</i>). A Biography. By <span class="smcap">Edward Smith</span>. 2
+vols., crown 8vo, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Confessions of a Frivolous Girl (The): A Novel of Fashionable
+Life.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Robert Grant</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cradle-Land of Arts and Creeds; or, Nothing New under the
+Sun.</i> By <span class="smcap">Charles J. Stone</span>, Barrister-at-law, and late Advocate,
+High Courts, Bombay. 8vo, pp. 420, cloth, 14<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cripps the Carrier.</i> 3rd Edition, 6<i>s.</i> See <span class="smcap">Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cruise of H.M.S. "Challenger" (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">W. J. J. Spry</span>, R.N.
+With Route Map and many Illustrations. 6th Edition, demy 8vo, cloth,
+18<i>s.</i> Cheap Edition, crown 8vo, some of the Illustrations, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Curious Adventures of a Field Cricket.</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">Ernest
+Candèze</span>. Translated by <span class="smcap">N. D'Anvérs</span>. With numerous fine
+Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plain binding and edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Dana (R. H.) Two Years before the Mast and Twenty-Four
+years After.</i> Revised. Edition, with Notes, 12mo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Daughter (A) of Heth.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Day of My Life (A); or, Every Day Experiences at Eton.</i>
+By an <span class="smcap">Eton Boy</span>, Author of "About Some Fellows." 16mo, cloth
+extra, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 6th Thousand.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C7" id="Page_C7">7</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Diane.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dick Cheveley: his Fortunes and Misfortunes.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. G.
+Kingston</span>. 350 pp., square 16mo, and 22 full-page Illustrations.
+Cloth, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dick Sands, the Boy Captain.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>. With
+nearly 100 Illustrations, cloth, gilt, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plain binding and plain
+edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dictionary (General) of Archæology and Antiquities.</i> From
+the French of <span class="smcap">E. Bosc</span>. Crown 8vo, with nearly 200 Illustrations,
+10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dodge (Mrs. M.) Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates.</i> An
+entirely New Edition, with 59 Full-page and other Woodcuts.
+Square crown 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i>; Text only, paper, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dogs of Assize.</i> A Legal Sketch-Book in Black and White.
+Containing 6 Drawings by <span class="smcap">Walter J. Allen</span>. Folio, in wrapper, 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Eight Cousins</i>. <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Eighteenth Century Studies.</i> Essays by <span class="smcap">F. Hitchman</span>.
+Demy 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Elementary Education in Saxony.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. L. Bashford</span>, M.A.,
+Trin. Coll., Camb. For Masters and Mistresses of Elementary
+Schools. Sewn, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Elinor Dryden.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Embroidery (Handbook of).</i> By <span class="smcap">L. Higgin</span>. Edited by <span class="smcap">Lady
+Marian Alford</span>, and published by authority of the Royal School of
+Art Needlework. With 16 page Illustrations, Designs for Borders,
+&amp;c. Crown 8vo, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>English Philosophers.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Iwan Muller</span>, M.A., New
+College, Oxon. A Series of Volumes containing short biographies
+of the most celebrated English Philosophers, to each of whom is
+assigned a separate volume, giving as comprehensive and detailed a
+statement of his views and contributions to Philosophy as possible,
+explanatory rather than critical, opening with a brief biographical
+sketch, and concluding with a short general summary, and a bibliographical
+appendix. The Volumes will be issued at brief intervals, in
+square 16mo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, containing about 200 pp. each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The following are in the press</i>:&mdash;-</p>
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Bacon.</b> Professor <span class="smcap">Fowler</span>, Professor of Logic in Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Berkeley.</b> Professor <span class="smcap">T. H. Green</span>, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
+Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Hamilton.</b> Professor <span class="smcap">Monk</span>, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Dublin.
+[<i>Ready.</i></li>
+
+<li><b>J. S. Mill.</b> <span class="smcap">Helen Taylor</span>, Editor of "The Works of Buckle," &amp;c.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C8" id="Page_C8">8</a></span></li>
+
+<li><b>Mansel.</b> Rev. <span class="smcap">J. H. Huckin, D.D.</span>, Head Master of Repton.</li>
+
+<li><b>Adam Smith.</b> <span class="smcap">J. A. Farrer, M.A.</span>, Author of "Primitive Manners and Customs."
+[<i>Ready.</i></li>
+
+<li><b>Hobbes.</b> <span class="smcap">A. H. Gosset, B.A.</span>, Fellow of New College, Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Bentham.</b> <span class="smcap">G. E. Buckle, M.A.</span>, Fellow of All Souls', Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Austin.</b> <span class="smcap">Harry Johnson, B.A.</span>, late Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Hartley.</b> } <span class="smcap">E. S. Bowen, B.A.</span>, late Scholar of New College,</li>
+
+<li><b>James Mill.</b> } Oxford.
+[<i>Ready.</i></li>
+
+<li><b>Shaftesbury.</b> } Professor <span class="smcap">Fowler</span>.</li>
+
+<li><b>Hutcheson.</b> }</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review"><i>Arrangements are in progress for volumes on</i> <span class="smcap">Locke</span>, <span class="smcap">Hume</span>, <span class="smcap">Paley</span>, <span class="smcap">Reid</span>, <i>&amp;c.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Episodes of French History.</i> Edited, with Notes, Genealogical,
+Historical, and other Tables, by <span class="smcap">Gustave Masson, B.A.</span></p>
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>1. Charlemagne and the Carlovingians.</b></li>
+
+<li><b>2. Louis XI. and the Crusades.</b></li>
+
+<li><b>3. Francis I. and Charles V.</b></li>
+
+<li><b>4. Francis I. and the Renaissance.</b></li>
+</ul>
+<p class="review">The above Series is based upon M. Guizot's "History of France."
+Each volume is choicely Illustrated, with Maps, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Erema; or, My Father's Sin.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Etcher (The).</i> Containing 36 Examples of the Original
+Etched work of Celebrated Artists, amongst others: <span class="smcap">Birket Foster</span>,
+<span class="smcap">J. E. Hodgson, R.A.</span>, <span class="smcap">Colin Hunter</span>, <span class="smcap">J. P. Heseltine</span>, <span class="smcap">Robert
+W. Macbeth</span>, <span class="smcap">R. S. Chattock</span>, <span class="smcap">H. R. Robertson</span>, &amp;c., &amp;c.
+Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2<i>l.</i> 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Eton.</i> <i>See</i> "Day of my Life," "Out of School," "About Some
+Fellows."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Evans (C.) Over the Hills and Far Away.</i> By <span class="smcap">C. Evans</span>.
+One Volume, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Strange Friendship.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Eve of Saint Agnes (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">John Keats</span>. Illustrated with
+Nineteen Etchings by <span class="smcap">Charles O. Murray</span>. Folio, cloth extra, 21<i>s.</i>
+An Edition de Luxe on large paper, containing proof impressions, has
+been printed, and specially bound, 3<i>l.</i> 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Farm Ballads.</i> By <span class="smcap">Will Carleton</span>. Boards, 1<i>s.</i>; cloth,
+gilt edges, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Fern Paradise (The): A Plea for the Culture of Ferns.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. New Edition, entirely Rewritten, Illustrated with
+Eighteen full-page, numerous other Woodcuts, including 8 Plates of
+Ferns and Four Photographs, large post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+Sixth Edition. In 12 Parts, sewn, 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C9" id="Page_C9">9</a></span>
+<i>Fern World (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Illustrated by Twelve
+Coloured Plates, giving complete Figures (Sixty-four in all) of every
+Species of British Fern, printed from Nature; by several full-page
+Engravings. Cloth, gilt, 6th Edition, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"Mr. <span class="smcap">Heath</span> has really given us good, well-written descriptions of our native
+Ferns, with indications of their habitats, the conditions under which they grow
+naturally, and under which they may be cultivated."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Few (A) Hints on Proving Wills.</i> Enlarged Edition, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>First Steps in Conversational French Grammar.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. Julien</span>.
+Being an Introduction to "Petites Leçons de Conversation et de
+Grammaire," by the same Author. Fcap. 8vo, 128 pp., 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Flooding of the Sahara (The).</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Mackenzie</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Food for the People; or, Lentils and other Vegetable Cookery.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">E. E. Orlebar</span>. Third Thousand. Small post 8vo, boards, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Fool's Errand (A).</i> By <span class="smcap">One of the Fools</span>. Author of "Bricks
+without Straw." Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with numerous Illustrations,
+8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Footsteps of the Master.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Stowe</span> (Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher</span>).</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Forbidden Land (A): Voyages to the Corea.</i> By <span class="smcap">G. Oppert</span>.
+Numerous Illustrations and Maps. Demy 8vo, cloth extra, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Four Lectures on Electric Induction.</i> Delivered at the Royal
+Institution, 1878-9. By <span class="smcap">J. E. H. Gordon</span>, B.A. Cantab. With
+numerous Illustrations. Cloth limp, square 16mo, 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Foreign Countries and the British Colonies.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">F. S.
+Pulling</span>, M.A., Lecturer at Queen's College, Oxford, and formerly
+Professor at the Yorkshire College, Leeds. A Series of small Volumes
+descriptive of the principal Countries of the World by well-known
+Authors, each Country being treated of by a Writer who from
+Personal Knowledge is qualified to speak with authority on the Subject.
+The Volumes average 180 crown 8vo pages each, contain 2 Maps
+and Illustrations, crown 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center s08"><i>The following is a List of the Volumes</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Denmark and Iceland.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. C. Otte</span>, Author of "Scandinavian
+History," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Greece.</b> By <span class="smcap">L. Sergeant</span>, B.A., Knight of the Hellenic Order
+of the Saviour, Author of "New Greece."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Switzerland.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. A. P. Coolidge</span>, M.A., Fellow of
+Magdalen College, Editor of <i>The Alpine Journal</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Austria.</b> By <span class="smcap">D. Kay</span>, F.R.G.S.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Russia.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. R. Morfill</span>, M.A., Oriel College, Oxford,
+Lecturer on the Ilchester Foundation, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Persia.</b> By Major-Gen. Sir <span class="smcap">F. J. Goldsmid</span>, K.C.S.I., Author of
+"Telegraph and Travel," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Japan.</b> By <span class="smcap">S. Mossman</span>, Author of "New Japan," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Peru.</b> By <span class="smcap">Clements H. Markham</span>, M.A., C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Canada.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Fraser Rae</span>, Author of "Westward by
+Rail," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C10" id="Page_C10">10</a></span>
+<b>Sweden and Norway.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">F. H. Woods</span>, M.A., Fellow
+of St. John's College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The West Indies.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. H. Eden</span>, F.R.G.S., Author of "Frozen
+Asia," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>New Zealand.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>France.</b> By Miss <span class="smcap">M. Roberts</span>, Author of "The Atelier du Lys,"
+"Mdlle. Mori," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Egypt.</b> By <span class="smcap">S. Lane Poole</span>, B.A., Author of "The Life of Edward
+Lane," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Spain.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Wentworth Webster</span>, M.A., Chaplain at
+St. Jean de Luz.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Turkey-in-Asia.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. C. McCoan</span>, M.P.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Australia.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. F. Vesey Fitzgerald</span>, late Premier of New
+South Wales.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Holland.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. L. Poole</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Franc (Maude Jeane).</i> The following form one Series, small
+post 8vo, in uniform cloth bindings, with gilt edges:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ul class="none">
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Emily's Choice.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Hall's Vineyard.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>John's Wife: a Story of Life in South Australia.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Marian; or, the Light of Some One's Home.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Silken Cords and Iron Fetters.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Vermont Vale.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Minnie's Mission.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Mercy.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Beatrice Melton's Discipline.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Froissart (The Boy's).</i> Selected from the Chronicles of England,
+France, Spain, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">Sidney Lanier</span>. The Volume is
+fully Illustrated, and uniform with "The Boy's King Arthur." Crown
+8vo, cloth, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Games of patience.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Cadogan</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Gentle Life</i> (Queen Edition). 2 vols, in 1, small 4to, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<hr class="l15" />
+<p class="center b12">THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Price 6<i>s.</i> each; or in calf extra, price 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; Smaller Edition, cloth
+extra, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">A Reprint (with the exception of "Familiar Words" and "Other
+People's Windows") has been issued in very neat limp cloth bindings
+at 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Gentle Life.</i> Essays in aid of the Formation of Character
+of Gentlemen and Gentlewomen. 21st Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"Deserves to be printed in letters of gold, and circulated in every house."&mdash;<i>Chambers'
+Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C11" id="Page_C11">11</a></span>
+<i>About in the World.</i> Essays by Author of "The Gentle Life."</p>
+
+<p class="review">"It is not easy to open it at any page without finding some handy idea."&mdash;<i>Morning
+Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Like unto Christ.</i> A New Translation of Thomas à Kempis'
+"De Imitatione Christi." 2nd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"Could not be presented in a more exquisite form, for a more sightly volume was
+never seen."&mdash;<i>Illustrated London News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Familiar Words.</i> An Index Verborum, or Quotation Handbook.
+Affording an immediate Reference to Phrases and Sentences
+that have become embedded in the English language. 4th and
+enlarged Edition. 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"The most extensive dictionary of quotation we have met with."&mdash;<i>Notes and
+Queries.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Essays by Montaigne.</i> Edited and Annotated by the Author
+of "The Gentle Life." With Portrait. 2nd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"We should be glad if any words of ours could help to bespeak a large circulation
+for this handsome attractive book."&mdash;<i>Illustrated Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia.</i> Written by Sir <span class="smcap">Philip
+Sidney</span>. Edited with Notes by Author of "The Gentle Life." 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"All the best things are retained intact in Mr. Friswell's edition."&mdash;<i>Examiner.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Gentle Life.</i> 2nd Series, 8th Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"There is not a single thought in the volume that does not contribute in some
+measure to the formation of a true gentleman."&mdash;<i>Daily News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected.</i> By the
+Author of "The Gentle Life." 3rd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"All who possess 'The Gentle Life' should own this volume."&mdash;<i>Standard.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Half-Length Portraits.</i> Short Studies of Notable Persons.
+By <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Essays on English Writers</i>, for the Self-improvement of
+Students in English Literature.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"To all who have neglected to read and study their native literature we would
+certainly suggest the volume before us as a fitting introduction."&mdash;<i>Examiner.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Other People's Windows.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>. 3rd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"The chapters are so lively in themselves, so mingled with shrewd views of
+human nature, so full of illustrative anecdotes, that the reader cannot fail to be
+amused."&mdash;<i>Morning Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>A Man's Thoughts.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>.</p>
+<hr class="l15" />
+<p class="hanging"><i>German Primer.</i> Being an Introduction to First Steps in
+German. By <span class="smcap">M. T. Preu</span>. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Getting On in the World; or, Hints on Success in Life.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">W. Mathews</span>, LL.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Gilpin's Forest Scenery.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Large
+post 8vo, with numerous Illustrations. Uniform with "The Fern
+World," 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> In 6 monthly parts, 2<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C12" id="Page_C12">12</a></span>
+<i>Gordon (J. E. H.).</i> <i>See</i> "Four Lectures on Electric Induction,"
+"Physical Treatise on Electricity," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Gouffé. The Royal Cookery Book.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Gouffé</span>; translated
+and adapted for English use by <span class="smcap">Alphonse Gouffé</span>, Head
+Pastrycook to her Majesty the Queen. Illustrated with large plates
+printed in colours. 161 Woodcuts, 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2<i>l.</i> 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; Domestic Edition, half-bound, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"By far the ablest and most complete work on cookery that has ever been submitted
+to the gastronomical world."&mdash;<i>Pall Mall Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Great Artists.</i> <i>See</i> "Biographies."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Great Historic Galleries of England (The).</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Lord
+Ronald Gower</span>, F.S.A., Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery.
+Illustrated by 24 large and carefully-executed <i>permanent</i> Photographs
+of some of the most celebrated Pictures by the Great Masters. Imperial
+4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Great Musicians (The).</i> A Series of Biographies of the Great
+Musicians. Edited by <span class="smcap">F. Hueffer</span>.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>1. Wagner.</b> By the <span class="smcap">Editor</span>.</li>
+<li><b>2. Weber.</b> By Sir <span class="smcap">Julius Benedict</span>.</li>
+<li><b>3. Mendelssohn.</b> By <span class="smcap">Joseph Bennett</span>.</li>
+<li><b>4. Schubert.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. F. Frost</span>.</li>
+<li><b>5. Rossini</b>, and the Modern Italian School. By <span class="smcap">H. Sutherland Edwards</span>.</li>
+<li><b>6. Marcello.</b> By <span class="smcap">Arrigo Boito</span>.</li>
+<li><b>7. Purcell.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. W. Cummings</span>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review">Dr. Hiller and other distinguished writers, both English and
+Foreign, have promised contributions. Each Volume is complete in
+itself. Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Guizot's History of France.</i> Translated by <span class="smcap">Robert Black</span>.
+Super-royal 8vo, very numerous Full-page and other Illustrations. In
+8 vols., cloth extra, gilt, each 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"It supplies a want which has long been felt, and ought to be in the hands of all
+students of history."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; <i>Masson's School Edition.</i> The
+History of France from the Earliest Times to the Outbreak of the
+Revolution; abridged from the Translation by Robert Black, M.A.,
+with Chronological Index, Historical and Genealogical Tables, &amp;c.
+By Professor <span class="smcap">Gustave Masson</span>, B.A., Assistant Master at Harrow
+School. With 24 full-page Portraits, and many other Illustrations.
+1 vol., demy 8vo, 600 pp., cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Guizot's History of England.</i> In 3 vols. of about 500 pp. each,
+containing 60 to 70 Full-page and other Illustrations, cloth extra, gilt,
+24<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"For luxury of typography, plainness of print, and beauty of illustration, these
+volumes, of which but one has as yet appeared in English, will hold their own
+against any production of an age so luxurious as our own in everything, typography
+not excepted."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Guyon (Mde.) Life.</i> By <span class="smcap">Upham</span>. 6th Edition, crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C13" id="Page_C13">13</a></span>
+<i>Handbook to the Charities of London.</i> <i>See</i> Low's.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>of Embroidery</i>; <i>which see</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>to the Principal Schools of England.</i> <i>See</i> Practical.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Half-Hours of Blind Man's Holiday; or, Summer and Winter
+Sketches in Black and White.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. W. Fenn</span>, Author of "After
+Sundown," &amp;c. 2 vols., cr. 8vo, 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hall (W. W.) How to Live Long; or, 1408 Health Maxims,
+Physical, Mental, and Moral.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. W. Hall</span>, A.M., M.D.
+Small post 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Dodge</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Harper's Monthly Magazine.</i> Published Monthly. 160 pages,
+fully Illustrated. 1<i>s.</i> With two Serial Novels by celebrated Authors.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"'Harper's Magazine' is so thickly sown with excellent illustrations that to count
+them would be a work of time; not that it is a picture magazine, for the engravings
+illustrate the text after the manner seen in some of our choicest <i>editions de luxe</i>."&mdash;<i>St.
+James's Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"It is so pretty, so big, and so cheap.... An extraordinary shillingsworth&mdash;160
+large octavo pages, with over a score of articles, and more than three times as
+many illustrations."&mdash;<i>Edinburgh Daily Review.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"An amazing shillingsworth ... combining choice literature of both nations."&mdash;<i>Nonconformist.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heart of Africa.</i> Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the
+Unexplored Regions of Central Africa, from 1868 to 1871. By Dr.
+<span class="smcap">Georg Schweinfurth</span>. Numerous Illustrations, and large Map.
+2 vols., crown 8vo, cloth, 15<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heath (Francis George).</i> <i>See</i> "Fern World," "Fern Paradise,"
+"Our Woodland Trees," "Trees and Ferns," "Gilpin's Forest
+Scenery," "Burnham Beeches," "Sylvan Spring," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heber's (Bishop) Illustrated Edition of Hymns.</i> With upwards
+of 100 beautiful Engravings. Small 4to, handsomely bound, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+Morocco, 18<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 21<i>s.</i> An entirely New Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heir of Kilfinnan (The).</i> New Story by <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>,
+Author of "Snow Shoes and Canoes," &amp;c. With Illustrations. Cloth,
+gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>History and Handbook of Photography.</i> Translated from the
+French of <span class="smcap">Gaston Tissandier</span>. Edited by <span class="smcap">J. Thomson</span>. Imperial
+16mo, over 300 pages, 70 Woodcuts, and Specimens of Prints by the
+best Permanent Processes. Second Edition, with an Appendix by
+the late Mr. <span class="smcap">Henry Fox Talbot</span>. Cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>History of a Crime (The); Deposition of an Eye-witness.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Victor Hugo</span>. 4 vols., crown 8vo, 42<i>s.</i> Cheap Edition, 1 vol., 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Ancient Art.</i> Translated from the German of <span class="smcap">John
+Winckelmann</span>, by <span class="smcap">John Lodge</span>, M.D. With very numerous
+Plates and Illustrations. 2 vols., 8vo, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>England.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Guizot</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>France.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Guizot</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C14" id="Page_C14">14</a></span>
+&mdash;&mdash; <i>Russia.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Rambaud</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Merchant Shipping.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Lindsay</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>United States.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Bryant</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power.</i> With
+several hundred Illustrations. By <span class="smcap">Alfred Barlow</span>. Royal 8vo,
+cloth extra, 1<i>l.</i> 5<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>How I Crossed Africa: from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean,
+Through Unknown Countries; Discovery of the Great Zambesi
+Affluents, &amp;c.</i>&mdash;Vol. I., The King's Rifle. Vol. II., The Coillard
+Family. By Major <span class="smcap">Serpa Pinto</span>. With 24 full-page and 118 half-page
+and smaller Illustrations, 13 small Maps, and 1 large one.
+2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>How to Live Long.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Hall</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>How to get Strong and how to Stay so.</i> By <span class="smcap">William Blaikie</span>.
+A Manual of Rational, Physical, Gymnastic, and other Exercises.
+With Illustrations, small post 8vo, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hugo (Victor). "Ninety-Three."</i> Illustrated. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Toilers of the Sea.</i> Crown 8vo. Illustrated, 6<i>s.</i>; fancy
+boards, 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; On large paper with all the original
+Illustrations, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>See</i> "History of a Crime."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hundred Greatest Men (The).</i> 8 portfolios, 21<i>s.</i> each, or 4
+vols., half morocco, gilt edges, 12 guineas, containing 15 to 20
+Portraits each. See below.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"Messrs. <span class="smcap">Sampson Low &amp; Co.</span> are about to issue an important 'International'
+work, entitled, 'THE HUNDRED GREATEST MEN;' being the Lives and
+Portraits of the 100 Greatest Men of History, divided into Eight Classes, each Class
+to form a Monthly Quarto Volume. The Introductions to the volumes are to be
+written by recognized authorities on the different subjects, the English contributors
+being <span class="smcap">Dean Stanley</span>, Mr. <span class="smcap">Matthew Arnold</span>, Mr. <span class="smcap">Froude</span>, and Professor <span class="smcap">Max
+Müller</span>; in Germany, Professor <span class="smcap">Helmholtz</span>; in France, MM. <span class="smcap">Taine</span> and
+<span class="smcap">Renan</span>; and in America, Mr. <span class="smcap">Emerson</span>. The Portraits are to be Reproductions
+from fine and rare Steel Engravings."&mdash;<i>Academy.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hygiene and Public Health (A Treatise on).</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">A. H.
+Buck</span>, M.D. Illustrated by numerous Wood Engravings. In 2
+royal 8vo vols., cloth, one guinea each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer.</i> <i>See</i>
+<span class="smcap">Bickersteth</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Illustrated Text-Books of Art-Education.</i> Edited by
+<span class="smcap">Edward J. Poynter</span>, R.A. Each Volume contains numerous Illustrations,
+and is strongly bound for the use of Students, price 5<i>s.</i> The
+Volumes now ready are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">PAINTING.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Classic and Italian.</b> By <span class="smcap">Percy R. Head</span>. With 50 Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li><b>German, Flemish, and Dutch.</b></li>
+<li><b>French and Spanish.</b></li>
+<li><b>English and American.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="center">ARCHITECTURE.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C15" id="Page_C15">15</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Classic and Early Christian.</b></li>
+<li><b>Gothic and Renaissance.</b> By <span class="smcap">T. Roger Smith</span>. With 50 Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="center">SCULPTURE.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Antique: Egyptian and Greek.</b></li>
+<li><b>Renaissance and Modern.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="center">ORNAMENT.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Decoration in Colour.</b></li>
+<li><b>Architectural Ornament.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Illustrations of China and its People.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Thompson</span>,
+F.R.G.S. Four Volumes, imperial 4to, each 3<i>l.</i> 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>In my Indian Garden.</i> By <span class="smcap">Phil Robinson</span>, Author of "Under
+the Punkah." With a Preface by <span class="smcap">Edwin Arnold</span>, M.A., C.S.I., &amp;c.
+Crown 8vo, limp cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Involuntary Voyage (An).</i> Showing how a Frenchman who
+abhorred the Sea was most unwillingly and by a series of accidents
+driven round the World. Numerous Illustrations. Square crown
+8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Irish Bar.</i> Comprising Anecdotes, Bon-Mots, and Biographical
+Sketches of the Bench and Bar of Ireland. By <span class="smcap">J. Roderick
+O'Flanagan</span>, Barrister-at-Law. Crown 8vo, 12<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Irish Land Question, and English Public Opinion (The).</i> With
+a Supplement on Griffith's Valuation. By <span class="smcap">R. Barry O'Brien</span>,
+Author of "The Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question."
+Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Irving (Washington).</i> Complete Library Edition of his Works
+in 27 Vols., Copyright, Unabridged, and with the Author's Latest
+Revisions, called the "Geoffrey Crayon" Edition, handsomely printed
+in large square 8vo, on superfine laid paper, and each volume, of
+about 500 pages, will be fully Illustrated. 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per vol. <i>See also</i>
+"Little Britain."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Jack and Jill.</i> By Miss <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>. Small post 8vo, cloth,
+gilt edges, 5<i>s.</i> With numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>John Holdsworth, Chief Mate.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clarke Russell</span>,
+Author of "Wreck of the Grosvenor." Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Kingston (W. H. G.).</i> <i>See</i> "Snow-Shoes," "Child of
+the Cavern," "Two Supercargoes," "With Axe and Rifle,"
+"Begum's Fortune," "Heir of Kilfinnan," "Dick Cheveley." Each
+vol., with very numerous Illustrations, square crown 16mo, gilt edges,
+7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C16" id="Page_C16">16</a></span>
+<i>Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.</i> 6<i>s.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Lenten Meditations.</i> In Two Series, each complete in itself.
+By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Claude Bosanquet</span>, Author of "Blossoms from the
+King's Garden." 16mo, cloth, First Series, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; Second Series, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Library of Religious Poetry.</i> A Collection of the Best Poems
+of all Ages and Tongues. With Biographical and Literary Notes.
+Edited by <span class="smcap">Philip Schaff</span>, D.D., LL.D., and <span class="smcap">Arthur Gilman</span>,
+M.A. Royal 8vo, pp. 1036, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Life and Letters of the Honourable Charles Sumner (The).</i>
+2 vols., royal 8vo, cloth. Second Edition, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Lindsay (W. S.) History of Merchant Shipping and Ancient
+Commerce.</i> Over 150 Illustrations, Maps, and Charts. In 4 vols.,
+demy 8vo, cloth extra. Vols. 1 and 2, 21<i>s.</i>; vols. 3 and 4, 24<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Little Britain</i>; together with <i>The Spectre Bridegroom</i>, and <i>A
+Legend of Sleepy Hollow</i>. By <span class="smcap">Washington Irving</span>. An entirely
+New <i>Edition de luxe</i>, specially suitable for Presentation. Illustrated
+by 120 very fine Engravings on Wood, by Mr. <span class="smcap">J. D. Cooper</span>.
+Designed by Mr. <span class="smcap">Charles O. Murray</span>. Square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Little King; or, the Taming of a Young Russian Count.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">S. Blandy</span>. 64 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer
+binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Little Mercy; or, For Better for Worse.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maude Jeanne
+Franc</span>, Author of "Marian," "Vermont Vale," &amp;c., &amp;c. Small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, 4<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Lost Sir Massingberd.</i> New Edition, crown 8vo, boards, coloured
+wrapper, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's German Series</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>1. The Illustrated German Primer.</b> Being the easiest introduction
+to the study of German for all beginners. 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>2. The Children's own German Book.</b> A Selection of Amusing
+and Instructive Stories in Prose. Edited by Dr. <span class="smcap">A. L. Meissner</span>.
+Small post 8vo, cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>3. The First German Reader, for Children from Ten to
+Fourteen.</b> Edited by Dr. <span class="smcap">A. L. Meissner</span>. Small post 8vo,
+cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>4. The Second German Reader.</b> Edited by Dr. <span class="smcap">A. L. Meissner</span>.
+Small post 8vo, cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center s08"><i>Buchheim's Deutsche Prosa. Two Volumes, sold separately</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>5. Schiller's Prosa.</b> Containing Selections from the Prose Works
+of Schiller, with Notes for English Students. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Buchheim</span>.
+Small post 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>6. Goethe's Prosa.</b> Selections from the Prose Works of Goethe,
+with Notes for English Students. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Buchheim</span>. Small
+post 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C17" id="Page_C17">17</a></span>
+<i>Low's International Series of Toy Books.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each; or
+Mounted on Linen, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">
+<b>1. Little Fred and his Fiddle</b>, from Asbjörnsen's "Norwegian
+Fairy Tales."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>2. The Lad and the North Wind</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>3. The Pancake</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>4. The Little Match Girl</b>, from H. C. Andersen's "Danish
+Fairy Tales."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>5. The Emperor's New Clothes</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>6. The Gallant Tin Soldier</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="review">The above in 1 vol., cloth extra, gilt edges, with the whole 36
+Coloured Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's Standard Library of Travel and Adventure.</i> Crown 8vo,
+bound uniformly in cloth extra, price 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>1. The Great Lone Land.</b> By Major <span class="smcap">W. F. Butler</span>, C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>2. The Wild North Land.</b> By Major <span class="smcap">W. F. Butler</span>, C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>3. How I found Livingstone.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. M. Stanley</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>4. The Threshold of the Unknown Region.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. R. Markham</span>.
+(4th Edition, with Additional Chapters, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>5. A Whaling-Cruise to Baffin's Bay and the Gulf of Boothia.</b>
+By <span class="smcap">A. H. Markham</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>6. Campaigning on the Oxus.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. A. MacGahan</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>7. Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.</b> By <span class="smcap">Major W. F.
+Butler</span>, C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>8. Ocean to Ocean.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">George M. Grant</span>. With
+Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>9. Cruise of the Challenger.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. J. J. Spry</span>, R.N.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>10. Schweinfurth's Heart of Africa.</b> 2 vols., 15<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>11. Through the Dark Continent.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. M. Stanley</span>, 1 vol.,
+12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+X/</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's Standard Novels.</i> Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i> each, cloth extra.</p>
+
+<p class="country">
+<b>My Lady Greensleeves.</b> By <span class="smcap">Helen Mathers</span>, Authoress of
+"Comin' through the Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Three Feathers.</b> By <span class="smcap">William Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Daughter of Heth.</b> 13th Edition. By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>. With
+Frontispiece by <span class="smcap">F. Walker</span>, A.R.A.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Kilmeny.</b> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>In Silk Attire.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>History of a Crime</b>: The Story of the Coup d'Etat. By <span class="smcap">Victor
+Hugo</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C18" id="Page_C18">18</a></span>
+<b>Alice Lorraine.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Lorna Doone.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>. 8th Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Cradock Nowell.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Clara Vaughan.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Cripps the Carrier.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Erema; or, My Father's Sin.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Mary Anerley.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Innocent.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Oliphant</span>. Eight Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Work.</b> A Story of Experience. By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>. Illustrations.
+<i>See also</i> Rose Library.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The Afghan Knife.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. A. Sterndale</span>, Author of "Seonee."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A French Heiress in her own Chateau.</b> By the Author of
+"One Only," "Constantia," &amp;c. Six Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Ninety-Three.</b> By <span class="smcap">Victor Hugo</span>. Numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>My Wife and I.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher Stowe</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Wreck of the Grosvenor.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>John Holdsworth</b> (Chief Mate). By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Elinor Dryden.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Diane.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Poganuc People, Their Loves and Lives.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher
+Stowe</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Golden Sorrow.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Cashel Hoey</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Story of the Dragonnades; or, Asylum Christi.</b> By the Rev.
+<span class="smcap">E. Gilliat</span>, M.A.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's Handbook to the Charities of London.</i> Edited and
+revised to date by <span class="smcap">C. Mackeson</span>, F.S.S., Editor of "A Guide to the
+Churches of London and its Suburbs," &amp;c. Paper, 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>MacGahan (J. A.) Campaigning on the Oxus, and the
+Fall of Khiva.</i> With Map and numerous Illustrations, 4th Edition,
+small post 8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Macgregor (John) "Rob Roy" on the Baltic.</i> 3rd Edition,
+small post 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Thousand Miles in the "Rob Roy" Canoe.</i> 11th
+Edition, small post 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Description of the "Rob Roy" Canoe</i>, with Plans,
+&amp;c., 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Voyage Alone in the Yawl "Rob Roy."</i> New
+Edition; thoroughly revised, with additions, small post 8vo, 5<i>s.</i>;
+boards, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C19" id="Page_C19">19</a></span>
+<i>Mackenzie (D.) The Flooding of the Sahara.</i> By <span class="smcap">Donald
+Mackenzie</span>. 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Macquoid (Mrs.) Elinor Dryden.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Diane.</i> Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Magazine.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Harper</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Markham (C. R.) The Threshold of the unknown Region.</i>
+Crown 8vo, with Four Maps, 4th Edition. Cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Maury (Commander) Physical Geography of the Sea, and its
+Meteorology.</i> Being a Reconstruction and Enlargement of his former
+Work, with Charts and Diagrams. New Edition, crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Memoirs of Count Miot de Melito.</i> 2 vols., demy 8vo, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Memoirs of Madame de Rémusat, 1802-1808.</i> By her Grandson,
+<span class="smcap">M. Paul de Rémusat</span>, Senator. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Cashel
+Hoey</span> and Mr. <span class="smcap">John Lillie</span>. 4th Edition, cloth extra. This
+work was written by Madame de Rémusat during the time she
+was living on the most intimate terms with the Empress Josephine,
+and is full of revelations respecting the private life of Bonaparte, and
+of men and politics of the first years of the century. Revelations
+which have already created a great sensation in Paris. 8vo, 2 vols., 32<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Menus (366, one for each day of the year).</i> Translated from the
+French of <span class="smcap">Count Brisse</span>, by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Matthew Clarke</span>. Crown
+8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Men of Mark: a Gallery of Contemporary Portraits of the most
+Eminent Men of the Day taken from Life</i>, especially for this publication,
+price 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> monthly. Vols. I., II., III., IV., and V., handsomely
+bound, cloth, gilt edges, 25<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Mendelssohn Family (The).</i> Translated from the German of
+<span class="smcap">E. Bock</span>. Demy 8vo, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Michael Strogoff.</i> 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 5<i>s.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Verne</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Mitford (Miss).</i> <i>See</i> "Our Village."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Military Maxims.</i> By <span class="smcap">Captain B. Terling</span>. Medium 16mo,
+in roan case, with pencil for the pocket, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Mountain and Prairie: a Journey from Victoria to Winnipeg,
+viâ Peace River Pass.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Daniel M. Gordon</span>, B.D.,
+Ottawa. Small post 8vo, with Maps and Illustrations, cloth extra,
+8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Music.</i> <i>See</i> "Great Musicians."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>My Lady Greensleeves.</i> By <span class="smcap">Helen Mathers</span>, Authoress of
+"Comin' through the Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &amp;c. 1 vol. edition,
+crown 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C20" id="Page_C20">20</a></span>
+<i>Mysterious Island.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>. 3 vols., imperial 16mo.
+150 Illustrations, cloth gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each; elaborately bound, gilt
+edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. Cheap Edition, with some of the Illustrations,
+cloth, gilt, 2<i>s.</i>; paper, 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>National Music of the World.</i> By the late <span class="smcap">Henry F.
+Chorley</span>. Edited by <span class="smcap">H. G. Hewlett</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth, 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Naval Brigade in South Africa (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry F. Norbury</span>,
+C.B., R.N. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Child's Play (A).</i> Sixteen Drawings by E. V. B. Beautifully
+printed in colours, 4to, cloth extra, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Guinea (A Few Months in).</i> By <span class="smcap">Octavius C. Stone</span>,
+F.R.G.S. With numerous Illustrations from the Author's own
+Drawings. Crown 8vo, cloth, 12<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>What I did and what I saw.</i> By <span class="smcap">L. M. D'Albertis</span>,
+Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy, Honorary Member and
+Gold Medallist of the I.R.G.S., C.M.Z.S., &amp;c., &amp;c. In 2 vols.,
+demy 8vo, cloth extra, with Maps, Coloured Plates, and numerous
+very fine Woodcut Illustrations, 42<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Ireland.</i> By <span class="smcap">A. M. Sullivan</span>, M.P. for Louth. 2 vols.,
+demy 8vo, 30<i>s.</i> Cheaper Edition, 1 vol., crown 8vo, 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Novels.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per vol.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Mary Marston.</b> By <span class="smcap">George MacDonald</span>. 3 vols. Third Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Sarah de Beranger.</b> By <span class="smcap">Jean Ingelow</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Don John.</b> By <span class="smcap">Jean Ingelow</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Sunrise</b>: A Story of these Times. By <span class="smcap">William Black</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Sailor's Sweetheart.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>, Author of "The
+Wreck of the Grosvenor," "John Holdsworth," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Lisa Lena.</b> By <span class="smcap">Edward Jenkins</span>, Author of "Ginx's Baby."
+2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Plot of the Present Day.</b> By <span class="smcap">Kate Hope</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Black Abbey.</b> By <span class="smcap">M. Crommelin</span>, Author of "Queenie," &amp;c.
+3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Flower o' the Broom.</b> By the Author of "Rare Pale Margaret,"
+3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The Grandidiers</b>: A Tale of Berlin. Translated from the German
+by Captain <span class="smcap">Wm. Savile</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Errant</b>: A Life Story of Latter-Day Chivalry. By <span class="smcap">Percy Greg</span>,
+Author of "Across the Zodiac," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Fancy Free.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. Gibbon</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The Stillwater Tragedy.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. B. Aldrich</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Prince Fortune and Prince Fatal.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Carrington</span>,
+Author of "My Cousin Maurice," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C21" id="Page_C21">21</a></span>
+<b>An English Squire.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. B. Coleridge</span>, Author of "Lady
+Betty," "Hanbury Wills," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Christowell.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Mr. Caroli.</b> By Miss <span class="smcap">Seguin</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>David Broome, Artist.</b> By Miss <span class="smcap">O'Reilly</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Braes of Yarrow.</b> By <span class="smcap">Chas. Gibbon</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Nice and Her Neighbours.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Canon Hole</span>, Author
+of "A Book about Roses," "A Little Tour in Ireland," &amp;c. Small
+4to, with numerous choice Illustrations, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Noble Words and Noble Deeds.</i> From the French of <span class="smcap">E. Muller</span>.
+Containing many Full-page Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Philippoteaux</span>. Square
+imperial 16mo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>North American Review (The).</i> Monthly, price 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Nothing to Wear; and Two Millions.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. A. Butler</span>.
+New Edition. Small post 8vo, in stiff coloured wrapper, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Nursery Playmates (Prince of).</i> 217 Coloured pictures for
+Children by eminent Artists. Folio, in coloured boards, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Oberammergau Passion Play.</i> <i>See</i> "Art in the
+Mountains."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>O'Brien.</i> <i>See</i> "Parliamentary History" and "Irish Land
+Question."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Old-Fashioned Girl.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>On Horseback through Asia Minor.</i> By Capt. <span class="smcap">Fred Burnaby</span>,
+Royal Horse Guards, Author of "A Ride to Khiva." 2 vols.,
+8vo, with three Maps and Portrait of Author, 6th Edition, 38<i>s.</i>;
+Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Our Little Ones in Heaven.</i> Edited by the Rev. <span class="smcap">H. Robbins</span>.
+With Frontispiece after Sir <span class="smcap">Joshua Reynolds</span>. Fcap., cloth extra,
+New Edition&mdash;the 3rd, with Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Our Village.</i> By <span class="smcap">Mary Russell Mitford</span>. Illustrated with
+Frontispiece Steel Engraving, and 12 full-page and 157 smaller Cuts
+of Figure Subjects and Scenes. Crown 4to, cloth, gilt edges, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Our Woodland Trees.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Large post 8vo,
+cloth, gilt edges, uniform with "Fern World" and "Fern Paradise,"
+by the same Author. 8 Coloured Plates (showing leaves of every
+British Tree) and 20 Woodcuts, cloth, gilt edges, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Third
+Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C22" id="Page_C22">22</a></span>
+<i>Painters of All Schools.</i> By <span class="smcap">Louis Viardot</span>, and other
+Writers. 500 pp., super-royal 8vo, 20 Full-page and 70 smaller
+Engravings, cloth extra, 25<i>s.</i> A New Edition is issued in Half-crown
+parts, with fifty additional portraits, cloth, gilt edges, 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Painting (A Short History of the British School of).</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Geo. H. Shepherd</span>. Post 8vo, cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Palliser (Mrs.) A History of Lace, from the Earliest Period.</i>
+A New and Revised Edition, with additional cuts and text, upwards
+of 100 Illustrations and coloured Designs. 1 vol., 8vo, 1<i>l.</i> 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Historic Devices, Badges, and War Cries.</i> 8vo, 1<i>l.</i> 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The China Collector's Pocket Companion.</i> With upwards
+of 1000 Illustrations of Marks and Monograms. 2nd Edition,
+with Additions. Small post 8vo, limp cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question (The).</i> From
+1829 to 1869, and the Origin and Results of the Ulster Custom. By
+<span class="smcap">R. Barry O'Brien</span>, Barrister-at-Law, Author of "The Irish Land
+Question and English Public Opinion." 3rd Edition, corrected and
+revised, with additional matter. Post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P., in a Letter to the Author, says:&mdash;
+"I thank you for kindly sending me your work, and I hope that the sad and discreditable
+story which you have told so well in your narrative of the Irish Land
+Question may be useful at a period when we have more than ever of reason to desire
+that it should be thoroughly understood."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Pathways of Palestine: a Descriptive Tour through the Holy
+Land.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Canon Tristram</span>. Illustrated with 44 permanent
+Photographs. (The Photographs are large, and most perfect
+Specimens of the Art.) Published in 22 Monthly Parts, 4to, in
+Wrapper, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"... The Photographs which illustrate these pages may justly claim, as works
+of art, to be the most admirably executed views which have been produced....</p>
+
+<p class="review">"As the writer is on the point of making a fourth visit of exploration to the
+country, any new discoveries which come under observation will be at once incorporated
+in this work."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Peasant Life in the West of England.</i> By <span class="smcap">Francis George
+Heath</span>, Author of "Sylvan Spring," "The Fern World." Crown
+8vo, about 350 pp., 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Petites Leçons de Conversation et de Grammaire: Oral and
+Conversational Method; being Lessons introducing the most Useful
+Topics of Conversation, upon an entirely new principle, &amp;c.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">F. Julien</span>, French Master at King Edward the Sixth's School,
+Birmingham. Author of "The Student's French Examiner," "First
+Steps in Conversational French Grammar," which see.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Phillips (L.) Dictionary of Biographical Reference.</i> 8vo,
+1<i>l.</i> 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Photography (History and Handbook of).</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Tissandier</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C23" id="Page_C23">23</a></span>
+<i>Physical Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. E. H.
+Gordon, B.A.</span> With about 200 coloured, full-page, and other
+Illustrations. Among the newer portions of the work may be
+enumerated: All the more recent investigations on Striæ by Spottiswoode,
+De la Rue, Moulton, &amp;c., an account of Mr. Crooke's recent
+researches; full descriptions and pictures of all the modern Magnetic
+Survey Instruments now used at Kew Observatory; full accounts of
+all the modern work on Specific Inductive Capacity, and of the more
+recent determination of the ratio of Electric units (v). In respect to
+the number and beauty of the Illustrations, the work is quite unique.
+2 vols., 8vo, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Pinto (Major Serpa).</i> <i>See</i> "How I Crossed Africa."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Plutarch's Lives.</i> An Entirely New and Library Edition.
+Edited by <span class="smcap">A. H. Clough</span>, Esq. 5 vols., 8vo, 2<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i>; half-morocco,
+gilt top, 3<i>l.</i> Also in 1 vol., royal 8vo, 800 pp., cloth extra, 18<i>s.</i>;
+half-bound, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Poems of the Inner Life.</i> A New Edition, Revised, with many
+additional Poems. Small post 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Poganuc People: their Loves and Lives.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher
+Stowe</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Polar Expeditions.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Koldewey</span>, <span class="smcap">Markham</span>, <span class="smcap">MacGahan</span>,
+and <span class="smcap">Nares</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Poynter (Edward J., R.A.).</i> <i>See</i> "Illustrated Text-books."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Practical (A) Handbook to the Principal Schools of England.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">C. E. Pascoe</span>. New Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Prejevalsky (N. M.) From Kulja, across the Tian Shan to Lobnor.</i>
+Translated by <span class="smcap">E. Delmar Morgan, F.R.G.S.</span> Demy 8vo,
+with a Map. 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Primitive Folk Moots; or, Open-Air Assemblies in Britain.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">George Laurence Gomme, F.S.A.</span>, Honorary Secretary to the
+Folk-Lore Society, Author of "Index of Municipal Offices." 1 vol.,
+crown 8vo, cloth, 12<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">This work deals with an earlier phase of the history of English
+Institutions than has yet been attempted.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Publisher's Circular (The), and General Record of British and
+Foreign Literature.</i> Published on the 1st and 15th of every Month, 3<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Pyrenees (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry Blackburn</span>. With 100 Illustrations
+by <span class="smcap">Gustave Doré</span>, a New Map of Routes, and Information for
+Travellers, corrected to 1881. With a description of Lourdes in 1880.
+Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Rambaud
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C24" id="Page_C24">24</a></span>
+(Alfred). History of Russia, from its Origin
+to the Year 1877.</i> With Six Maps. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">L. B.
+Lan</span>. 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 38<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Recollections of Writers.</i> By <span class="smcap">Charles</span> and <span class="smcap">Mary Cowden
+Clarke</span>. Authors of "The Concordance to Shakespeare," &amp;c.;
+with Letters of <span class="smcap">Charles Lamb</span>, <span class="smcap">Leigh Hunt</span>, <span class="smcap">Douglas Jerrold</span>,
+and <span class="smcap">Charles Dickens</span>; and a Preface by <span class="smcap">Mary Cowden Clarke</span>.
+Crown 8vo, cloth, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rémusat (Madame de).</i> <i>See</i> "Memoirs of."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Robinson (Phil).</i> <i>See</i> "In my Indian Garden," "Under the
+Punkah."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rochefoucauld's Reflections.</i> Bayard Series, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rogers (S.) Pleasures of Memory.</i> <i>See</i> "Choice Editions of
+Choice Books." 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rose in Bloom.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Rose Library.</i> Popular Literature of all countries. Each
+volume, 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Many of the Volumes are Illustrated&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country">1. <b>Sea-Gull Rock.</b> By <span class="smcap">Jules Sandeau</span>. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">2. <b>Little Women.</b> By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">3. <b>Little Women Wedded.</b> Forming a Sequel to "Little Women."</p>
+
+<p class="country">4. <b>The House on Wheels.</b> By <span class="smcap">Madame de Stolz</span>. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">5. <b>Little Men.</b> By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>. Dble. vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">6. <b>The Old-Fashioned Girl.</b> By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>. Double
+vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">7. <b>The Mistress of the Manse.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. G. Holland</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">8. <b>Timothy Titcomb's Letters to Young People, Single and
+Married.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">9. <b>Undine, and the Two Captains.</b> By Baron <span class="smcap">De La Motte
+Fouqué</span>. A New Translation by <span class="smcap">F. E. Bunnett</span>. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">10. <b>Draxy Miller's Dowry, and the Elder's Wife.</b> By <span class="smcap">Saxe
+Holm</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">11. <b>The Four Gold Pieces.</b> By Madame <span class="smcap">Gouraud</span>. Numerous
+Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country">12. <b>Work.</b> A Story of Experience. First Portion. By <span class="smcap">Louisa M.
+Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">13. <b>Beginning Again.</b> Being a Continuation of "Work." By
+<span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">14. <b>Picciola; or, the Prison Flower.</b> By <span class="smcap">X. B. Saintine</span>.
+Numerous Graphic Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C25" id="Page_C25">25</a></span>
+15. <b>Robert's Holidays.</b> Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">16. <b>The Two Children of St. Domingo.</b> Numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country">17. <b>Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">18. <b>Stowe (Mrs. H. B.) The Pearl of Orr's Island.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">19. &mdash;&mdash; <b>The Minister's Wooing.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">20. &mdash;&mdash; <b>Betty's Bright Idea.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">21. &mdash;&mdash; <b>The Ghost in the Mill.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">22. &mdash;&mdash; <b>Captain Kidd's Money.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">23. &mdash;&mdash; <b>We and our Neighbours.</b> Double vol., 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">24. &mdash;&mdash; <b>My Wife and I.</b> Double vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">25. <b>Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">26. <b>Lowell's My Study Window.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">27. <b>Holmes (O. W.) The Guardian Angel.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">28. <b>Warner (C. D.) My Summer in a Garden.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">29. <b>Hitherto.</b> By the Author of "The Gayworthys." 2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="country">30. <b>Helen's Babies.</b> By their Latest Victim.</p>
+
+<p class="country">31. <b>The Barton Experiment.</b> By the Author of "Helen's Babies."</p>
+
+<p class="country">32. <b>Dred.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher Stowe</span>. Double vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth,
+gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">33. <b>Warner (C. D.)</b> <b>In the Wilderness.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">34. <b>Six to One.</b> A Seaside Story.</p>
+
+<p class="country">35. <b>Nothing to Wear, and Two Millions.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">36. <b>Farm Ballads.</b> By <span class="smcap">Will Carleton</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Russell (W. Clarke).</i> <i>See</i> "A Sailor's Sweetheart," 3 vols.,
+31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; "Wreck of the Grosvenor," 6<i>s.</i>; "John Holdsworth (Chief
+Mate)," 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Russell (W. H., LL.D.) The Tour of the Prince of Wales in
+India.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. Russell, LL.D.</span> Fully Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Sydney
+P. Hall, M.A.</span> Super-royal 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 52<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+Large Paper Edition, 84<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Sancta Christina: a Story of the First Century.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Eleanor E. Orlebar</span>. With a Preface by the Bishop of Winchester.
+Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Seonee: Sporting in the Satpura Range of Central India, and in
+the Valley of the Nerbudda.</i> By <span class="smcap">R. A. Sterndale, F.R.G.S.</span> 8vo,
+with numerous Illustrations, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Seven Years in South Africa: Travels, Researches, and Hunting
+Adventures between the Diamond-Fields and the Zambesi (1872-1879).</i>
+By Dr. <span class="smcap">Emil Holub</span>. With over 100 Original Illustrations
+and 4 Maps. In 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Serpent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C26" id="Page_C26">26</a></span>
+Charmer (The): a Tale of the Indian Mutiny.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Louis Rousselet</span>, Author of "India and its Native Princes."
+Numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Shakespeare (The Boudoir).</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Henry Cundell</span>.
+Carefully bracketted for reading aloud; freed from all objectionable
+matter, and altogether free from notes. Price 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each volume,
+cloth extra, gilt edges. Contents:&mdash;Vol. I., Cymbeline&mdash;Merchant of
+Venice. Each play separately, paper cover, 1<i>s.</i> Vol. II., As You
+Like It&mdash;King Lear&mdash;Much Ado about Nothing. Vol. III., Romeo
+and Juliet&mdash;Twelfth Night&mdash;King John. The latter six plays separately,
+paper cover, 9<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Shakespeare Key (The).</i> Forming a Companion to "The
+Complete Concordance to Shakespeare." By <span class="smcap">Charles</span> and <span class="smcap">Mary
+Cowden Clarke</span>. Demy 8vo, 800 pp., 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Shooting: its Appliances, Practice, and Purpose.</i> By <span class="smcap">James
+Dalziel Dougall, F.S.A., F.Z.A.</span>, Author of "Scottish Field
+Sports," &amp;c. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"The book is admirable in every way.... We wish it every success."&mdash;<i>Globe.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"A very complete treatise.... Likely to take high rank as an authority on
+shooting."&mdash;<i>Daily News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Silent Hour (The).</i> <i>See</i> "Gentle Life Series."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Silver Pitchers.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Simon (Jules).</i> <i>See</i> "Government of M. Thiers."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Six to One.</i> A Seaside Story. 16mo, boards, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Smith (G.) Assyrian Explorations and Discoveries</i>. By the late
+<span class="smcap">George Smith</span>. Illustrated by Photographs and Woodcuts. Demy
+8vo, 6th Edition, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Chaldean Account of Genesis.</i> By the late
+<span class="smcap">G. Smith</span>, of the Department of Oriental Antiquities, British Museum.
+With many Illustrations. Demy 8vo, cloth extra, 6th Edition, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; An entirely New Edition, completely revised and rewritten
+by the Rev. <span class="smcap">Professor Sayce</span>, Queen's College, Oxford.
+Demy 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Snow-Shoes and Canoes; or, the Adventures of a Fur-Hunter
+in the Hudson's Bay Territory.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. 2nd
+Edition. With numerous Illustrations. Square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C27" id="Page_C27">27</a></span>
+<i>Songs and Etchings in Shade and Sunshine.</i> By J. E. G.
+Illustrated with 44 Etchings. Small 4to, cloth, gilt tops, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>South African Campaign, 1879 (The).</i> Compiled by <span class="smcap">J. P.
+Mackinnon</span> (formerly 72nd Highlanders), and <span class="smcap">S. H. Shadbolt</span>;
+and dedicated, by permission, to Field-Marshal H.R.H. The Duke
+of Cambridge. 4to, handsomely bound in cloth extra, 2<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>South Kensington Museum.</i> Published, with the sanction of
+the Science and Art Department, in Monthly Parts, each containing
+8 Plates, price 1<i>s.</i> Volume I., containing 12 numbers, handsomely
+bound, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Stanley (H. M.) How I Found Livingstone.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> ; large Paper Edition, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>"My Kalulu," Prince, King, and Slave.</i> A Story
+from Central Africa. Crown 8vo, about 430 pp., with numerous graphic
+Illustrations, after Original Designs by the Author. Cloth, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Coomassie and Magdala.</i> A Story of Two British
+Campaigns in Africa. Demy 8vo, with Maps and Illustrations, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Through the Dark Continent</i>, which see.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story of a Mountain (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">E. Reclus</span>. Translated by
+<span class="smcap">Bertha Ness</span>. 8vo, with Illustrations, cloth extra, gilt edges,
+7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story of a Soldiers Life (The); or, Peace, War, and Mutiny.</i>
+By Lieut.-General <span class="smcap">John Alexander Ewart, C.B.</span>, Aide-de-Camp
+to the Queen from 1859 to 1872. 2 vols., demy 8vo, with Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story of the Zulu Campaign (The).</i> By Major <span class="smcap">Ashe</span> (late
+King's Dragoon Guards), and Captain the Hon. <span class="smcap">E. V. Wyatt-Edgell</span>
+(late 17th Lancers, killed at Ulundi). Dedicated by special
+permission to Her Imperial Highness the Empress Eugénie. 8vo, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story without an End.</i> From the German of Carové, by the late
+Mrs. <span class="smcap">Sarah T. Austin</span>. Crown 4to, with 15 Exquisite Drawings
+by E. V. B., printed in Colours in Fac-simile of the original Water
+Colours; and numerous other Illustrations. New Edition, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; square 4to, with Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Harvey</span>. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Stowe (Mrs. Beecher) Dred.</i> Cheap Edition, boards, 2<i>s.</i> Cloth,
+gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C28" id="Page_C28">28</a></span>
+<i>Stowe (Mrs. Beecher) Footsteps of the Master.</i> With Illustrations
+and red borders. Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Geography</i>, with 60 Illustrations. Square cloth, 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Foxes.</i> Cheap Edition, 1<i>s.</i>; Library Edition,
+4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Betty's Bright Idea.</i> 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>My Wife and I; or, Harry Henderson's History.</i>
+Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i><a name="FNanchor_C" id="FNanchor_C" href="#Footnote_C" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Minister's Wooing.</i> 5<i>s.</i>; Copyright Series, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cl., 2<i>s.</i><a href="#Footnote_C" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Old Town Folk.</i> 6<i>s.</i>; Cheap Edition, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Old Town Fireside Stories.</i> Cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Our Folks at Poganuc.</i> 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>We and our Neighbours.</i> 1 vol., small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i>
+Sequel to "My Wife and I."[See also Rose Library]</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Pink and White Tyranny.</i> Small post 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+Cheap Edition, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Queer Little People.</i> 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Chimney Corner.</i> 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Pearl of Orr's Island.</i> Crown 8vo, 5<i>s.</i>[See also Rose Library]</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Pussey Willow.</i> Fcap., 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Woman in Sacred History.</i> Illustrated with 15
+Chromo-lithographs and about 200 pages of Letterpress. Dem
+4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Student's French Examiner.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. Julien</span>, Author of "Petites
+Leçons de Conversation et de Grammaire." Square crown 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Studies in German Literature.</i> By <span class="smcap">Bayard Taylor</span>. Edited
+by <span class="smcap">Marie Taylor</span>. With an Introduction by the Hon. <span class="smcap">George
+H. Boker</span>. 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C29" id="Page_C29">29</a></span>
+<i>Studies in the Theory of Descent.</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">Aug. Weismann</span>,
+Professor in the University of Freiburg. Translated and edited by
+<span class="smcap">Raphael Meldola, F.C.S.</span>, Secretary of the Entomological Society
+of London. Part I.&mdash;"On the Seasonal Dimorphism of Butterflies,"
+containing Original Communications by Mr. <span class="smcap">W. H. Edwards</span>, of
+Coalburgh. With two Coloured Plates. Price of Part. I. (to Subscribers
+for the whole work only), 8<i>s.</i>; Part II. (6 coloured plates), 16<i>s.</i>;
+Part III., 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sugar Beet (The).</i> Including a History of the Beet Sugar
+Industry in Europe, Varieties of the Sugar Beet, Examination, Soils,
+Tillage, Seeds and Sowing, Yield and Cost of Cultivation, Harvesting,
+Transportation, Conservation, Feeding Qualities of the Beet and of
+the Pulp, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">L. S. Ware</span>. Illustrated. 8vo, cloth extra, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sullivan (A. M., M.P.).</i> <i>See</i> "New Ireland."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sulphuric Acid (A Practical Treatise on the Manufacture of).</i>
+By A. G. and <span class="smcap">C. G. Lock</span>, Consulting Chemical Engineers. With
+77 Construction Plates, and other Illustrations. Royal 8vo, 2<i>l.</i> 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sumner (Hon. Charles).</i> <i>See</i> Life and Letters.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sunrise: A Story of These Times.</i> By <span class="smcap">William Black</span>,
+Author of "A Daughter of Heth," &amp;c. 3 vols., 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Surgeon's Handbook on the Treatment of Wounded in War.</i> By
+Dr. <span class="smcap">Friedrich Esmarch</span>, Professor of Surgery in the University of
+Kiel, and Surgeon-General to the Prussian Army. Translated by
+<span class="smcap">H. H. Clutton, B.A.</span> Cantab., F.R.C.S. Numerous Coloured
+Plates and Illustrations, 8vo, strongly bound in flexible leather, 1<i>l.</i> 8<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sylvan Spring.</i> By <span class="smcap">Francis George Heath</span>. Illustrated by
+12 Coloured Plates, drawn by <span class="smcap">F. E. Hulme, F.L.S.</span>, Artist and
+Author of "Familiar Wild Flowers;" by 16 full-page, and more than
+100 other Wood Engravings. Large post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Tauchnitz's English Editions of German Authors.</i>
+Each volume, cloth flexible, 2<i>s.</i>; or sewed, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Catalogues post
+free on application.)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>(B.) German and English Dictionary.</i> Cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+roan, 2s,</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>French and English.</i> Paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; roan
+2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C30" id="Page_C30">30</a></span>
+<i>Tauchnitz (B.) Italian and English Dictionary.</i> Paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; roan, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Spanish and English.</i> Paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; roan,
+2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>New Testament.</i> Cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; gilt, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Taylor (Bayard).</i> <i>See</i> "Studies in German Literature."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Through America; or, Nine Months in the United States.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">W. G. Marshall, M.A.</span> With nearly 100 Woodcuts of Views of
+Utah country and the famous Yosemite Valley; The Giant Trees,
+New York, Niagara, San Francisco, &amp;c.; containing a full account
+of Mormon Life, as noted by the Author during his visits to Salt Lake
+City in 1878 and 1879. In 1 vol., demy 8vo, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Through the Dark Continent: The Sources of the Nile; Around
+the Great Lakes, and down the Congo.</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry M. Stanley</span>.
+2 vols., demy 8vo, containing 150 Full-page and other Illustrations,
+2 Portraits of the Author, and 10 Maps, 42<i>s.</i> Seventh Thousand.
+Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, with some of the Illustrations and Maps.
+1 vol., 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Tour of the Prince of Wales in India.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Russell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Trees and Ferns</i>. By <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt
+edges, with numerous Illustrations, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Two Friends.</i> By <span class="smcap">Lucien Biart</span>, Author of "Adventures of
+a Young Naturalist," "My Rambles in the New World," &amp;c. Small
+post 8vo, numerous Illustrations, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Two Supercargoes (The); or, Adventures in Savage Africa.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. Numerous Full-page Illustrations. Square
+imperial 16mo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Under the Punkah.</i> By <span class="smcap">Phil Robinson</span>, Author of "In
+my Indian Garden." Crown 8vo, limp cloth, uniform with the
+above, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Up and Down; or, Fifty Years' Experiences in Australia,
+California, New Zealand, India, China, and the South Pacific.</i>
+Being the Life History of Capt. <span class="smcap">W. J. Barry</span>. Written by Himself.
+With several Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C31" id="Page_C31">31</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center b12 p4"><b>BOOKS BY JULES VERNE.</b></p>
+
+<table class = "verne" summary = "Verne Books">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc br"><span class="smcap">Large Crown</span> 8vo</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="4">Containing 350 to
+600 pp. and from
+50 to 100 full-page illustrations</td>
+<td colspan="4">Containing the whole
+of the text with some
+illustrations.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc br bt">WORKS.</td>
+<td class="tdc br bt" colspan = "2">In very handsome cloth binding, gilt edges.</td>
+<td class="tdc br bt" colspan = "2">In plainer binding plain edges.</td>
+<td class="tdc br bt" colspan = "2">In cloth binding, gilt edges, smaller type.</td>
+<td class="tdc bt" colspan = "2">Coloured Boards</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br bt">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="bt"><i>s.</i></td>
+<td class="br bt"><i>d.</i></td>
+<td class="bt"><i>s.</i></td>
+<td class="br bt"><i>d.</i></td>
+<td class="bt"><i>s.</i></td>
+<td class="br bt"><i>d.</i></td>
+<td class="bt" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea. Part I.</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2">10</td>
+<td class="br " rowspan="2">6</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2">5</td>
+<td class="br " rowspan="2">0</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2">3</td>
+<td class="br " rowspan="2">6</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2" colspan="2">2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea. Part II.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">Hector Servadac</td>
+<td class="">10</td>
+<td class="br ">6</td>
+<td class="">5</td>
+<td class="br ">0</td>
+<td class="">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br ">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">The Fur Country</td>
+<td class="">10</td>
+<td class="br ">6</td>
+<td class="">5</td>
+<td class="br ">0</td>
+<td class="">3</td>
+<td class="br ">6</td>
+<td class="br " colspan="2">2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">From the Earth to the Moon and a Trip round it</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br" >6</td>
+<td>5</td>
+<td class="br" >0</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">2 vols., 2<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+<td colspan="2">2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Michael Strogoff, the Courier of the Czar</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br" >6</td>
+<td>5</td>
+<td class="br" >0</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Dick Sands, the Boy Captain</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br" >6</td>
+<td>5</td>
+<td class="br" >0</td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
+<td><i>s.</i></td>
+<td><i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Five Weeks in a Balloon</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Adventures of Three Englishmen and Three Russians</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Around the World in Eighty Days</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">A Floating City</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Blockade Runners</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Dr. Ox's Experiment</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Master Zacharius</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">A Drama in the Air</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">A Winter amid the Ice</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Survivors of the "Chancellor"</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td colspan = "2">2 vols. 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Martin Paz</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br"><span class="smcap">The Mysterious Island</span>, 3 vols.:&mdash;</td>
+<td>22</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>6</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. I. Dropped from the Clouds</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. II. Abandoned</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. III. Secret of the Island</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Child of the Cavern.</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Begum's Fortune</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Tribulations of a Chinaman</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br"><span class="smcap">The Steam House</span>, 2 vols.:&mdash;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. I. The Demon of Cawnpore</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. II. Tigers and Traitors</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="s08"><span class="smcap">Celebrated Travels and Travellers.</span> 3 vols. Demy 8vo, 600 pp., upwards of 100
+full-page illustrations, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; gilt edges, 14<i>s.</i> each:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="s08">(1) <span class="smcap">The Exploration of the World.</span></p>
+
+<p class="s08">(2) <span class="smcap">The Great Navigators of the Eighteenth Century.</span></p>
+
+<p class="s08">(3) <span class="smcap">The Great Explorers of the Nineteenth Century.</span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Waller
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C32" id="Page_C32">32</a></span>
+(Rev. C. H.) The Names on the Gates of Pearl,
+and other Studies.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">C. H. Waller, M.A.</span> Second
+Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Grammar and Analytical Vocabulary of the Words in
+the Greek Testament.</i> Compiled from Brüder's Concordance. For
+the use of Divinity Students and Greek Testament Classes. By the
+Rev. <span class="smcap">C. H. Waller, M.A.</span> Part I., The Grammar. Small post 8vo,
+cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Part II. The Vocabulary, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Adoption and the Covenant. Some Thoughts on
+Confirmation.</i> Super-royal 16mo, cloth limp, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Warner (C. D.) My Summer in a Garden.</i> Rose Library, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Back-log Studies.</i> Boards, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>In the Wilderness.</i> Rose Library, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Mummies and Moslems.</i> 8vo, cloth, 12<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Weaving.</i> <i>See</i> "History and Principles."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Wills, A Few Hints on Proving, without Professional Assistance.</i>
+By a <span class="smcap">Probate Court Official</span>. 5th Edition, revised with Forms
+of Wills, Residuary Accounts, &amp;c. Fcap. 8vo, cloth limp, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>With Axe and Rifle on the Western Prairies.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. G.
+Kingston</span>. With numerous Illustrations, square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Woolsey (C. D., LL.D.) Introduction to the Study of International
+Law; designed as an Aid in Teaching and in Historical
+Studies.</i> 5th Edition, demy 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Words of Wellington: Maxims and Opinions, Sentences and
+Reflections of the Great Duke, gathered from his Despatches, Letters,
+and Speeches</i> (Bayard Series). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Wreck of the Grosvenor.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>, Author of
+"John Holdsworth, Chief Mate," "A Sailor's Sweetheart," &amp;c. 6<i>s.</i>
+Third and Cheaper Edition.</p>
+<hr class="l30 p2" />
+<p class="center p2">London:<br />
+
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON,<br />
+
+<span class="s08">CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET, E.C.</span></p>
+
+<div>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 44333 ***</div>
+</body>
+</html>
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
+Procedures for determining public domain status are described in
+the "Copyright How-To" at https://www.gutenberg.org.
+
+No investigation has been made concerning possible copyrights in
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #44333 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/44333)
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II
+(of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II (of 2)
+ A Record of a Ramble in the United States and Canada in
+ the Spring and Summer of 1881
+
+Author: W. H. Russell
+
+Release Date: December 1, 2013 [EBook #44333]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Melissa McDaniel and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have
+ been preserved. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Italic text is denoted by _underscores_. Bold text is denoted by
+ =equals signs=.
+
+ On page 26 Count Fritz Thumb should possibly be Count FritzThumb.
+
+ On page 120 Indianopolis should possibly be Indianapolis.
+
+ On page 124, General How should possibly be General Howe.
+
+ A triangle symbol in the text is represented as [**triangle]
+
+
+
+
+ HESPEROTHEN;
+ NOTES FROM THE WEST:
+ A RECORD OF A
+ RAMBLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
+ IN THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1881.
+
+ BY
+ W. H. RUSSELL, LL.D.
+ BARRISTER-AT-LAW.
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+ LONDON:
+ SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+ CROWN BUILDINGS, 188 FLEET STREET.
+ 1882.
+
+ [All rights reserved.]
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific Page 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber 19
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea-Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!" 44
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Cañon 73
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of
+ Travel--A Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to
+ New York 107
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our Last Day in America 122
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home 140
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great Courtesy to
+ Strangers--Manners and Customs 151
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the Maori
+ 186
+
+
+
+
+HESPEROTHEN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific.
+
+
+_May 30th._--At an hour as to which controversy might arise, owing to
+the changes of time to which we have been subjected, the train, which
+had pulled up but seldom during the night, stopped at Deming Junction,
+where the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad "connects" with
+the Southern Pacific, on which our cars were to be "hauled" to San
+Francisco. Jefferson time and San Francisco time differ two hours, so
+at one end of the station we scored 6 A.M., and at the other 8 A.M.
+The sooner one gets away from Deming in any direction the better. A
+year ago--as is usually the case hereabouts--there was not a trace of
+a town on the dry ugly plain covered with prickly acacias and "Spanish
+bayonets"; now Deming flourishes in gaming and drinking saloons,
+express offices, and all the horrors of "enterprise" in the West. The
+look-out revealed a few tents, wooden shanties, a station, at which
+workmen were running up a frame-house, ground littered with preserved
+provision tins, broken crockery, adobes and refuse of all sorts. At
+the door of one hut, swarming with flies, swung half a carcase of beef;
+two women were washing, pale-faced, but not uncheerful creatures, who
+had not a good opinion of Deming and its population. "They carry out a
+dead man a day, or used to," said one informant. The lady washerwomen
+did not quite corroborate the figure; but, remarked the chattier
+of the two, "there was a considerable shewtin' about last night!"
+To the observation of one of the party that he was "going to have a
+look about," the other lady made reply, "I guess if you dew it will
+be 'hands up' for ten cents with you." On the platform was a United
+States marshal, with a revolver stuck in his belt, but his duties were
+considered to be punitive rather than preventive. Here Mr. Chase and
+Mr. Hawley left us to return to Topeka. At the abschiednehmen Sir H.
+Green was affected by a proof of interest in his welfare of a touching
+character and very full of local colour; one of our friends beckoned
+to him, took him aside, and pulling out a revolver ("It is hands up!"
+thought Sir Henry), fully loaded, pressed it on his acceptance in the
+kindest manner as a useful _compagnon de voyage_. As we were not to
+stay at Deming, the self-sacrifice was not consummated.
+
+The regular train having come up, our special was tacked on to it, and
+in an hour the locomotive puffed out of the depot, and sped westerly
+on its way at the rate of twenty miles an hour, across a plain some
+fifteen miles broad, bordered by jagged, irregular mountain ranges
+north and south, as dry as a bone--so dry that water for the engine
+has to be brought to the stations in tanks. A scanty growth of what
+looked like camel grass, interspersed euphorbias and cactuses of great
+height, was all that met the eye. We are approaching the great basin of
+Arizona, and are warned that much dust and great heat must be expected,
+and that the "scenery" does not improve in point of variety or verdure,
+both of which are nearly at zero. A vigorous, well-directed campaign
+against the flies in the saloon gave us comparative repose; then the
+blinds being pulled down, and the thermometer reduced to 83 deg.,
+society settled itself to study, with results indicated presently by
+a gentle _susurrus_ on the sofas. A sudden alarm, "Look at the deer!"
+There sure enough was a herd of antelopes flying over the scrub towards
+the horizon, which flickered about in the heat in a mirage of islands
+and uplifted mountain ends--so vanished.
+
+After passing Lordsburgh, a desolate spot in the desert, there appeared
+a beautiful mirage. The sand became a sheet of water, waveless and
+mirror-like, and in it we saw reflected in trenchant outline the
+mountain range beyond. "It must be water! it is water!" exclaimed an
+unbelieving director. And, lo! as he spoke the "dust devils" rose and
+danced along the face of the sea; in another minute the vision was
+gone; the dazzling sand, white, blank and dull, mocked our senses.
+This was near Stein's Pass, up which the train of nine carriages
+was climbing--"the heaviest train that has gone over yet," said the
+triumphant conductor. "But we thought we'd try it." Each waggon weighed
+30 tons. The Pass is three miles long, and we were working at a grade
+of 74 feet with a 19-inch cylinder engine.
+
+Between Pyramid Station and San Simon (_stant nomina umbrarum_--the
+names of mere shadows of stations) the western border of New Mexico
+is crossed, and we enter the great Territory of Arizona, which lies
+between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.
+
+It is bounded by New Mexico on the east, by Mexico on the south, by
+Utah and Nevada on the north and north-west, and by California in
+continuation of the western boundary. It is as large as New York,
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware together. Whom it
+belonged to first, so far as occupation constitutes possession, I
+know not; but the Spaniards owned and neglected it for more than
+three centuries before the Americans possessed it. In 1848 and 1853
+the regions now forming Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and
+Nevada were ceded by the descendants of the Spanish conquerors to
+the conquering Anglo-American. It would need weeks of assiduous
+travel to explore the portion of Arizona where the most interesting
+ruins in America, the cities of the Zoltecs or the Aztecs--for the
+experts differ respecting their origin--are to be found. The weight
+of authority and of recent investigation leads one to believe that the
+Aztecs were not the builders of these ruined cities. Humboldt, indeed,
+believed that they were; but, as Mr. Hinton remarks, in his capital
+little handbook, which I recommend to prospectors, emigrants, tourists,
+and travellers, "to suppose such an utter abandonment of settled
+habitations, it will be necessary to suppose some strange impelling
+reasons, either in climate or other causes, that must have amounted
+to a catastrophe. An hypothesis which would leave a whole race able
+to conquer an empire, and to preserve power enough to abandon without
+destruction their old homes, implies conditions and forces without
+a known historical parallel." The conclusion that many native cities
+were flourishing when the Spaniards arrived in America may, perhaps, be
+questioned. There is a distinctive character about them, differing from
+that of the Mississippi mounds, the Central American pyramids, or the
+ruined cities of Yucatan.
+
+The site of one of these cities was pointed out to us from the
+train, and that was all we saw of them. But I heard so much about
+the mysterious remains that I was induced to procure Mr. Bancroft's
+remarkable essay on the native races of the Pacific Coast. Mr. Bancroft
+believes that the Pueblos and other Indians, in a state of civilisation
+which they subsequently lost, were the earliest inhabitants of these
+countries and the builders of the cities; that the Apaches came down
+upon them, and their work being then aided by the Spaniards, this
+original agricultural people were swept off the face of the earth.
+But where the Apaches came from the American ethnologists have not,
+I believe, determined. For hundreds of miles these ruins cover the
+country--stone houses, ancient watch-towers, and adobe buildings,
+around which are quantities of stone implements, masses of crockery and
+pottery. In some places there are structures of wood and stone, without
+iron, the masonry consisting of thin plates of sandstone dressed on the
+edges, and laid in coarse mortar nearly as hard as the stone itself.
+
+The explorers who have discovered the most interesting cities in
+Arizona and elsewhere were officers of the United States army. They
+have been the true pioneers of American civilisation in the West, and
+it is most creditable to them that they have been able to furnish so
+much scientific and antiquarian observation in the execution of their
+arduous and often painful duty in Indian warfare. There is no cold
+shade cast upon the labours of officers who desire to make a little
+reputation for themselves by contributions to scientific publications,
+and by papers on natural history and the like in periodical
+publications or in the daily press.
+
+There is, as might be expected from its position, a very high
+temperature in Arizona. This lasts from the middle of June to the first
+of October. During the best part of summer exertion of any kind is
+impossible. Metal objects cannot be handled without producing blisters;
+rain scarcely ever falls; and, to keep up the drain of constant
+evaporation, a man must drink a gallon or two gallons of water a day.
+Mr. Ross Brown, speaking of the summer, declares that "everything
+dries. Waggons dry; men dry; chickens dry. There is no juice left in
+anything, living or dead, by the close of summer. Officers and soldiers
+creak as they walk; chickens hatched at the season come out of the
+shell ready cooked. Bacon is eaten with a spoon, and butter must stand
+in the sun an hour before the flies become dry enough for use. The
+Indians sit in the river with fresh mud on their heads, and, by dint of
+constant dipping and sprinkling, manage to keep from roasting, though
+they usually come out parboiled." But, although it is recorded that a
+party encamped on a narrow cañon where the temperature was 120 degrees,
+there was no sunstroke. And in that respect the climate differs from
+that on the eastern coast, where, especially this very summer, a great
+number of deaths were caused by _coup de soleil_. People, with the
+thermometer marking 94 degrees, talk of its being agreeably cold. An
+exceedingly interesting fact, if it be one, connected with residence in
+this part of the world is the wholesome effect of complete abstinence.
+Death from want of water was by no means infrequent in the old days
+before so many wells were dug; but it only occurs when there is a good
+deal of humidity in the air. Although alcoholic drinks and tobacco have
+an injurious effect, there is a large consumption of both at all the
+stations and at the mines.
+
+As in the Orange River Free State, where probably the conditions of
+temperature are not very dissimilar, pulmonary complaints are cured, so
+a residence in Arizona, it is said, stops consumption; and there are
+authentic statements that people who arrived in a rapid decline have
+experienced almost immediate relief of the principal symptoms, and have
+been finally cured. Governor Safford, in an official letter, states
+that his lungs were a good deal diseased, and that he was suffering
+with a severe cough when he reached Arizona, and that in six months his
+cough left him. He is satisfied the warm, dry atmosphere acted like a
+healing balm to diseased lungs, and that, the pores being kept open,
+the impurities which attack weak organs escape through the skin. Dr.
+Loryea, of San Francisco, and Dr. Sawyer aver that Arizona is nature's
+Turkish bath, and that Yuma, that evil-looking place, contains the
+fountains of health.
+
+Of such vast regions a small acquaintance acquired by passing rapidly
+twice over a line of railway does not entitle one to speak; but, if
+what we read and heard of Arizona be true, there is within its limits
+enormous mineral and agricultural wealth. There are carboniferous
+basins of great extent and richness. The mountains teem with ore.
+Silver and gold, copper pyrites, zinc, and lead are to be found over
+a great range, the extent of which is as yet imperfectly known. There
+are sulphates of nearly all the metals; metallic oxides, chlorides,
+carbonates, nitrates; agates, amethysts, garnets, and other precious
+stones. People there are who believe that the diamond, the emerald, and
+the ruby will turn up in due time. In fact, if one were to be guided
+by the accounts in the papers or the guide-books, he would think that
+a sure way of making an immediate fortune would be to settle down on
+any hillside in this favourite land. Nevertheless, what I saw out of my
+window gave me reason to suppose that there was poverty in Arizona as
+well as in the old country. Nor did the buildings which I saw by the
+way at the sparse stations and infrequent towns give an idea that the
+in-dwellers were well-to-do in the world. The adobe, or burnt brick,
+which is a common material in lieu of better, has always a ruinous
+appearance. The houses built of it yesterday seem tumbling to pieces
+from the influences of old age.
+
+We take no note of time save by its relation to constant motion, and
+to the "programme"--a Procrustean bed on which we have voluntarily
+placed our tortured limbs. Sometimes in the hours of the night, which
+could not be called still because of the incessant pealing, rattling,
+and thundering of the train, I thought of the wonderful ways of man
+with himself in such affairs as we were now engaged in. There is a play
+of Terence which was a trouble to me in my youth, so long ago that I
+remember very little more of it than the dismal and elongated name;
+but Mr. "Heautontimorumenos" never needlessly bound himself up in a
+programme and delivered his life over to a time-table! It is likely
+enough, seeing what sort of man he was, that he would have adopted
+that course had he lived in these days. I admit that programmes are
+necessary when your movements regulate, or have to be regulated by,
+those of other people; and that was the case in some measure with
+us, but the solicitude it occasioned the worthy and valued friends,
+whose brows I perceived becoming more puckered, and whose faces and
+spirits were heavy with cares connected with the programme, to come up
+to time, was beyond belief, and I vowed if ever I had my own way with
+the ordering of a party I would have no programme at all. And plot and
+calculate as you will, a gale of wind, or a heated axle, or a broken
+bridge, or a flood, upsets everything, and your schemes gang aglee
+utterly! It was admirable to see how we were working out the destiny
+we had made manifest for ourselves in advance so long ago, but the task
+was not easy. What curious sounds, by the way, our train made at night!
+One could now and then compose words to the tune of the wheels, and
+the regular rhythm forced one at times to hum the words of a song, of
+which the train seemed to hammer out the music. It seemed so strange to
+be turning into bed night after night, and waking up to pass the same
+life day after day, like a log of wood carried on by an interminable,
+irresistible torrent.
+
+Provided with books and newspapers, and friends to converse with, as
+well as with sights to see, we had, however, no reason to complain
+that time hung heavy on our hands as the train sped on. The books
+were very utilitarian, it is true--Reports of Chambers of Commerce,
+statistics and papers connected with railway and commercial enterprise
+and the like. But our directors took to that literature with avidity,
+and aided by maps and tables, copiously furnished to them, seemed
+bent on passing with honours in a competitive examination anent the
+American railway system. There were always, close at hand in the cars,
+competent authorities to answer questions, or able champions to engage
+in controversy, and as I heard all the subtle contentions, which I did
+not understand, concerning signalling and baggage checking, gauges and
+engines, curves and gradients, freights and fares, I was set to think
+what the field had been in which all the ingenuity and talent displayed
+in dealing with such topics were exercised in pre-railway days. These
+discussions were mostly connected with the consideration of profits
+and percentages, and that was a neutral ground on which the combatants
+manoeuvred their facts and figures as in a natural "_schauplatz_".
+There were times when such investigations ran down like a clock,
+and no one wound them up again for a few hours, and then my friends
+digested the remains they found on the field of battle and strengthened
+themselves for friendly jousting.
+
+Not very long ago there would have been exceedingly good sporting in
+many parts of Arizona. Grizzly bears, common and black bears; pumas,
+mountain sheep, jaguars, ocelots, opossums, panthers, wolves, and
+lynxes are largely distributed over the hill ranges. There are also
+hares and rabbits and many smaller animals. Wild turkeys have much
+diminished of late years; but there is a variety of birds, some of
+them excellent for the spit. The chase, however, is attended with some
+danger, unless one is very well booted and looks out where he treads,
+as rattle-snakes abound, and are of exceeding virulence, the black
+species being especially deadly. There are horned toads, but these are
+harmless.
+
+For the botanist Arizona is an almost inexhaustible field of
+delight. Any one who likes to read of vegetable wonders, or of an
+extraordinarily varied flora, cannot do better than get Dr. Loryea's
+work, or read 'New Mexico,' by Elias Brevoort. The growth which struck
+us most was that of the extraordinary cactus called the candelabra
+or Sahuaro. It is worth while going so far as the railway will take
+one to see these plants sticking up on the sides of a rock without a
+trace of verdure or moisture, rising to the height of 40 or 50 feet,
+and throwing out enormous arms at the most grotesque angles, each
+varying from the other in shape, the number of its arms, and in the
+manner in which they are disposed. This giant cactus is covered with
+prickles, and is of a light green colour. It is said that in the old
+days the Apache Indians not unfrequently made use of them as handy
+means of torture, and nailed their victims to a cactus previous to
+setting fire to it. The body of the plant is resinous, and it can
+be easily converted into a bonfire. Here and there we saw some with
+traces of pale yellow flowers. When these are gone there is a fruit,
+which makes an excellent preserve, or can be boiled into sugar. Then
+there are prickly pears in great quantities; and there is a "negro-head
+cactus," with a round top covered with sharp spines, which furnished
+the Mexicans with fish-hooks. "There is a soul of beauty in things
+evil." If a thirsty traveller coming upon one of these plants kindles
+a fire around it, the juices of its body are gradually concentrated
+into a central cavity, where they only wait incision to be liberated
+in the form of a pleasant drink, half a gallon or more in quantity.
+The appliances for getting a drink out of most of these roots are
+described at length in various books of travel; but however useful they
+may have been at the time, the activity of the Atchison, Topeka and
+Santa Fé Railway will in all probability exempt travellers in future
+from any necessity to avail themselves of these ingenious devices.
+Trees flourish in spite of the heat and want of water. As various as
+the trees are the human inhabitants, and one of the greatest marvels
+connected with them, perhaps, is the extraordinary variety of dialects
+amongst people of the same race, who lived in the same country long
+before the white man came to trouble them. They are decreasing, of
+course, in numbers; but in some of the reservations they seem to
+have arrested downward progress, and to have taken to some form of
+agricultural labour. At present Arizona is the happy hunting-ground
+of the unfortunate red man. There is, I am assured, no disposition on
+the part of the whites to intrude upon the reservations of the various
+tribes. I did not hear of any one who had come in from the East to
+settle with the view of making his fortune by farming; but miners have
+flooded the cañons, and climbed the mountain-tops; and now they have
+settled down into a steady way of life without any big "booms," as the
+Americans say, but with prospects of pretty certain returns for their
+labour.
+
+All night we travelled on, and when the morning came, we were still
+traversing the desert, still passing through one of the most sterile
+wastes on the face of the earth, where, however, by strange contrasts
+of nature--or is it strange?--there were in the mountains and in the
+ravines rich ores to tempt the cupidity and enterprize of man. We are
+continually reminded of similar wastes in India and in Africa; but no
+one, as far as I know, has yet discovered any mineral wealth in the
+north-western deserts of our Indian Empire. And although Captain Burton
+and others have fancied they have come across an El Dorado in Southern
+Egypt, and Ibrahim Pasha had such faith in the existence of gold in
+those regions that he led forth an expedition to perish there, there
+is no such fortune in store for the adventurous miner as awaits him in
+Arizona, Colorado, and California.
+
+_June 1st._--Everyone who has entered Arizona, or left it--and let us
+hope he went back all the better for his visit--will recollect Yuma for
+ever.
+
+Yuma is on the Colorado, which divides California from Arizona.
+The muddy waters of the river rush with immense velocity past the
+buttresses of the fine bridge, with a draw for steamers, that spans
+it. The town consists apparently of adobe houses, and these not very
+regularly built. I could not visit the main street for lack of time,
+but the offshoots within eyeshot of us were not tempting. All we
+could see from the railway windows were flat-roofed adobe houses, some
+squalid Indians nearly naked, the buildings, with the Stars and Stripes
+over them, of the United States post on the left bank, and a few wooden
+sheds. It is said to be one of the hottest places in the world, and
+certainly looked dry and dusty. They say that a soldier who died there
+and went to an unmentionable place, returned in the spirit to beg for
+a blanket, as he felt so cold!
+
+More happily constituted travellers than most of us have seen something
+pleasing in the aspect of the country roundabout, and have been moved
+to much admiration by the various tints of the hills in the distance,
+and by the rocks which constitute the near limits of the valley through
+which the river passes. In the old days, when the stage-coaches offered
+the only means of travelling through the district, there might have
+been a good deal to see along the road; but the rail generally avoids
+sights, and where nature is at its best, the engineer strikes deep down
+and burrows if he can. The colours of the hills are bright and varied;
+the lava rocks are of many shades, and the sun, piercing through strata
+of pure air, illuminates them with great vividness and force; but after
+a time the eye tires of the uniform hues of the landscape. For a few
+miles the rail runs close to the river, then plunges into the most
+remorseless, cruel waste of sand and rock, spread out up to the foot of
+the rugged hills of the Barnardino Range, I ever beheld--an abomination
+of desolation compared with which the Libyan Desert or the plains of
+Scinde were the Garden of the Hesperides. I cannot describe, nor could
+I at any time hope to succeed in giving an adequate conception of this
+dreadful wilderness. For 107 miles west there is not a drop of water to
+be found; the stations are dependent on the railway for their supplies.
+But Nature, as if to take away the reproach of permitting such a vast
+blotch on her fair face, kindly threw in Fata Morgana. We saw with
+delight widespread lakes with fairy islands in the midst; placid seas
+washing the base of the distant hills. This baked and dreary expanse
+extends nearly to San Gorgonio. We were spared the sandstorms which are
+so dreadful, nor did we experience inconvenience from the dust. The
+traveller, who has begun to despair of ever seeing anything greener
+than giant cacti and the adamantine vegetation which dispenses with
+water, is agreeably surprised as he approaches Los Angeles. If he
+be as fortunate as we were in having such friends as Colonel Baker
+and his wife to take charge of him, he will be amply repaid for far
+greater discomforts than any he experienced in the Colorado desert.
+From Los Angeles there is a railway to Santa Monica, seventeen miles
+distant, which belongs to Colonel Baker; and I would advise every one
+who can, either to spare or make the time for a diversion to that
+most delightful spot. Judge of the pleasure we felt when, after a
+picturesque run through orange groves, vineyards, and fields of corn
+and barley, we gazed on the waters of the Pacific--"θαλαττα! θαλαττα!"
+What a glorious scene! the broad bay lighted by the rays of the
+declining sun; the blue waves rolling on in solemn march, and
+breaking in long lines of foam on the dazzling sand, and nearer
+still the gardens and trees of the Pacific Biarritz which was about
+to welcome us! Our palace-car and its attendant carriages shot into a
+siding close to the beach. In a few minutes "every man Jack" was off to
+the bathing establishment to conform to the regulations ere we plunged
+into the sea. It is an orthodox bathing-place of the highest order. The
+Baths are extensive, and provided with every convenience and comfort
+for ladies and invalids; hot and cold, salt water and fresh, for those
+who do not like to trust themselves to the sea. A rope extended seaward
+to hold on by was needful, for the surf was heavy and the undertow
+strong. The water was delicious. Generally there is less sea on, and it
+is never too hot or too cold for bathing. Next morning we had another
+bath in a still rougher Pacific. The Duke and some of the party were
+driven about the country by Colonel and Mrs. Baker, and at 3 P.M., to
+our sorrow, we left the most lovable little spot of all we have seen
+on this continent. Good fortune be in store for Santa Monica! At Los
+Angeles, where carriages were waiting, we drove through the streets and
+suburbs, which enabled us to appreciate the reasons which induced the
+Spanish founders to give the city its name. In the evening we continued
+our journey, passing in the dark over the feat of engineering called
+the Loop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber.
+
+
+_June 2nd._--It is astonishing how soon one gets accustomed to the
+rattle and rumble of the rail, and sleeps all the night through after
+a time, waking up only when a train stops at a station, just as a
+miller is roused by the cessation of the clock of the mill-wheel. We
+keep good hours, and so at 4.30 this morning I was looking out of the
+window at a sea of blue mountain ridges upon the west, which looked
+like the waves of the ocean, so varied in the serrated edges was the
+line of stony waves which seemed as if they were about to sweep down
+over the great stretch of prairie. We were passing through a new land
+of Goshen, at least that was the name which I detected on the station
+board, indicating a junction with another line, and early as was the
+hour the door of the hospitable restaurant was open, and gentlemen
+in front were to be seen drawing their hands across their lips as if
+they had been taking a refresher in the early morning. Close at hand
+the country was perfectly flat, covered with glorious crops nearly
+ripe for the sickle, and indeed cut and stacked in some places. Water
+appeared abundant; a river flowing west was visible at intervals, its
+course marked by a line of trees. Large black cranes stalked about in
+the meadow-like fields, and hares sat up on end to take a look at the
+train. The paucity of human beings, except at the rare stations, was
+remarkable; only when I say "rare," perhaps I am scarcely justified,
+as there were little wooden huts at intervals perhaps of ten or twelve
+miles, where a saloon announced itself, and a possible ticket-office.
+
+On the east of the plain through which the line runs, the peaks of
+the Sierra Nevada were visible, but the journey was rather monotonous
+all the same, and we were glad when our train halted at Madera, about
+ninety miles from Goshen, where we were to get out and start on our
+expedition to the Yosemite Valley. Especial arrangements had been
+made for our conveyance, but I almost doubt now whether it would not
+have been better for us to have taken the ordinary carriage which
+leaves Madera every day, except Monday, for the Yosemite Valley, at
+7.45, arriving at Clarke's or Bruce's in somewhat less than twelve
+hours, so as to bring daylight with it to the halting-place; a very
+desirable thing, as we soon found out. It was 8 o'clock before our
+party started from Madera, in two Kendal carriages with four horses
+each. In one was the Duke, Lady Green, Mr. Stephen, and myself, with
+Crockett on the box; in another were Sir Henry Green, Mr. Wright, Major
+Anderson, and Mr. Jerome. Our driver was a man with the impossible
+name of MacLenathan, a resolute, dry, taciturn man, with a good face,
+seamed with the exposure to sun and rain of many years on the box.
+But he told us he had deserted it lately, and had taken to the work
+of livery stable keeper, only coming out on this occasion as driver to
+do honour to the Duke. As it turned out, it was well his right and his
+left hand had not lost their cunning. The driver of the other carriage
+was a noted character, rejoicing in the name of "Buffalo Bill," and
+later on we had reason to feel very thankful to him also for the
+possession of great pluck and nerve. For some ten or twelve miles the
+route, which consists of mere wheel tracks over the prairie, runs over
+moderately undulating land. On the right there is a shoot or _flume_
+for carrying down timber from the upper part of the mountain ridge
+fifty miles away. The dust was troublesome, and the rapid motion of
+the four horses scarcely saved us from the roasting sun. The scenery
+was not interesting; indeed, the great object of attraction was the
+little Californian quail with his pretty crest, running across through
+the grass or jumping up upon a stump to have a look at the travellers.
+Stage stables were far apart, but the speed was fair, and it was
+astonishing to see the excellent condition in which the horses were
+at the end of their long canter, and what capital steeds were taken
+out of the stalls, in which they were feeding on barley-straw, to
+be put into the traces. I think the average length of the stages was
+about twelve miles. We lost about an hour at a little mining village
+where we halted for dinner, a place called Coarse Gold, as well as
+I recollect, consisting of the usual buildings, a few shanties, the
+store, the hotel, far better than might have been expected, and a sort
+of wigwam or one-storeyed house, in front of which were assembled a
+number of "Digger Indians," degraded specimens of a degraded tribe.
+They sat looking at the new arrivals in the most apathetic manner,
+just as they might regard so many flies. The men were dressed in a
+compromise of old Indian attire, leather leggings and deerskin jackets,
+with European clothing, caps, bad hats and trousers, and old boots,
+the women swathed ungracefully in what seemed to be pieces of blanket,
+their legs encased in folds of dirty cotton. One of these Diggers was
+very slightly dressed, and as it is intensely cold in the winter, we
+asked him whether he did not feel the effect of the frost and snow.
+He knew a little English, and made the most of it. "When your body is
+covered you do not feel the cold," he said; "But your face is always
+uncovered, and yet you do not feel the cold there. An Indian's body is
+all face." And that was all the explanation he would vouchsafe to us.
+Somehow or another, what with delays at the stations, possibly caused
+by our being out of the regular running, and being an interpolation on
+the ordinary course of travel, and possibly owing to our reduced speed,
+for the carriages with four horses did not, it seems, go as fast as
+the public conveyance with six, it was getting dark as we approached
+the line of wooded hills, in a valley in which, many miles away, lay
+our halting-place for the night. The result of our delay in starting,
+concerning which the driver had been severe from time to time, was
+startlingly manifest as the coaches mounted the steep ascents of one of
+the most tortuous roads in the world. The spurs of the hills come down
+very sharply to the valley, and the road is carried round by a series
+of very severe gradients following the contour of the mountain-chain,
+so that at one time there is a deep gorge on your left, and then, as
+the road leaves that spur with the valley on that side and crosses to
+another spur, there is a great descent on the right, so that you are
+continually passing along by a series of precipices, to which, in our
+case, the fast gathering gloom imparted additional horror. Through the
+sighing of the wind in the trees aloft came the roar of the torrents
+down below. The drivers went along at a good steady canter, and from
+time to time, as we came round a sharp curve, I dare say the thought
+was in every one's mind, what would happen if one of the leaders
+fell, or if the driver slipped his hand in gathering up the reins to
+go round the corner. The scenery became more wild and formidable, so
+to speak, at every fresh turn. The colossal trees, which challenged
+admiration in the daytime, closed up in greater volume, darkening the
+narrow road completely, so that in an hour after entering upon the
+mountain-range it became as black as pitch. The lamps of Buffalo Bill
+in the leading carriage were some guide to our driver. He had none,
+and it was with anxiety, renewed every ten minutes or so, that we saw
+the lights in front describe a graceful curve, which showed that they
+were passing by one of the dips or cuts of the road. It needed skill
+and judgment for MacLenathan to conduct the carriage, because if he
+drove too close to that in front of us, the clouds of dust obscured
+the view, and if he dropped too far behind he lost the benefit of the
+lights. By enormous trunks of trees, by piles of timber, through deep
+cuttings in the rock, plashing over watercourses, descending swiftly
+into river-beds, and splashing through the fords over boulders, then
+climbing up steep hillsides, on and on, it seemed as though the night
+would never come to an end, and we inwardly, and audibly too, expressed
+our regret that we had not started a little earlier; but still there
+was an almost pleasurable excitement in holding on as we swept round
+one of these terrible gorges, and tried to look down into the gulf
+beneath. That last stage seemed interminable, but towards 9 o'clock at
+night the driver of the coach in front announced that we were getting
+"near at last"; and lucky it was, for his lights were giving out. "It
+is just as well that they did not," said our driver, "because it would
+be bad for you." "Why?" "Well," he said, "you would just have to get
+out and walk! I would not undertake to drive any one in the dark along
+such a road as this." Presently we heard the noise of rushing water,
+and gained the bank of a stream flowing with swiftness over a shingle
+bed. This we crossed, and in half an hour more, through the dark belt
+of trees in front, lights were discerned, and, crossing another stream
+and a bridge, our wearied horses were pulled up in front of the hotel,
+a large wooden building, on the steps of which were the landlord and
+his staff, and most of the inmates turned out to greet and inspect
+the travellers who had been long expected. "It is a bad country to go
+driving about in the dark," said Mr. Bruce, the landlord, a sentiment
+in which we thoroughly agreed. There was a supper in the common
+room, to which, albeit the fare was primitive enough, we did ample
+justice. Travellers have complained of the charges along the road, but,
+considering the distance which all articles have to be carried to the
+Valley, the heavy duties, and the shortness of the season, I do not
+think that any one with experience of Swiss inns would complain much;
+and if the traveller desires to drink claret, he must not be astonished
+if he pays eight or nine shillings a bottle for it. The ordinary fare,
+at hotel prices, is quite good enough for hungry people, and eggs,
+milk, and bread are abundant, and not dear. The bedrooms, sufficiently
+simple in all their appointments, are good enough to be welcome to
+tired people, for there is a fair bed to lie upon, and the sheets, as
+far as our experience went, were clean and fresh. Nor were the insect
+horrors, of which we may have some knowledge in parts of Europe, to be
+dreaded, not even mosquitoes at this time of year.
+
+Soon after dawn a thunderstorm broke over the valley, hail and torrents
+of rain, and the landlord congratulated us upon the cooling effect
+it would have on the air, and on the absence of dust, which is rather
+troublesome at times. It was necessary to make an early start in the
+morning, for it is a long journey to the Yosemite. For some years past
+the Valley has become a kind of American Chamouni, and if Americans
+swarm over Europe in search of the sublime and beautiful, they cannot
+be accused of neglecting altogether their own country. The first thing
+I saw, on walking out on the verandah of the hotel, was the stage-coach
+and six horses, with eight ladies and nine gentlemen, loading up for
+the Valley. They had arrived late the night before, a little in advance
+of us, and yet the ladies, bravely attired for the road, were all in
+their place in the _char à bancs_ long before 7. Travellers frequently
+stay at Bruce's, and our host promises good sport to any one who will
+make it his headquarters; but I cannot speak with any confidence on
+that point myself; still I should think it a very pleasant quarter for
+a man who had nothing else to do, and who had an aptitude for climbing,
+to go about looking out big game. We heard talk of pheasants, but
+saw none: the bird which is called by that name not being entitled
+to it, according to ornithologists. In front of the hotel was laid
+out the skin of a cinnamon bear, which had been shot by an Austrian
+gentleman--"Count Fritz Thumb," the landlord called him--a few days
+previously, and which was to be sent after him as a trophy of his
+skill. "But," says Boniface, "it was not he shot him at all; it was 'is
+old Injun hunter." Grizzlies, he said, were rare, but they were to be
+found if you went up high enough, and as he spoke he pointed up to the
+mountains towering away in the distance in grand Alpine proportions.
+Deer were common enough, and there were some tame specimens of the
+ordinary black deer running about in the enclosure. We had an early
+start, but not quite so early as the Americans; and it was wonderful
+how well our four hardy horses did the first stage, six and twenty
+miles, including some very sharp ascents from the Hotel.
+
+From time to time we got out and walked up the sharp bits, diverging
+to the right or left to gather the lovely flowers which grew on
+the roadside, or halting to admire the giant trees which clothed
+the mountain ridges. Pitiable ignorance! not to know the names of
+the plants or shrubs or wonderful bunches of blossoms, among which
+fluttered the most magnificently coloured butterflies. Woodpeckers
+of many different species uttered their quaint notes in jerky flight
+from tree to tree, or peered at the travellers from the shelter of
+the branches. Firs, pines, and spruces of enormous size, and trees
+to me unknown, formed a dense forest on each side of the road; but
+now and then we caught glimpses of the stupendous ranges of the alps
+beyond. It was lamentable to see the waste and wreck wrought in this
+wondrous wealth of timber--reckless, wicked waste. Charred trunks
+stood with leafless arms withered and black, or lay prone among the
+ferns in myriads. This was, we were told, the work of shepherds, who
+think nothing of setting fire to one of the finest trees in the world
+to warm themselves for an hour, and are delighted with a conflagration
+which may lay a hillside in ashes. And the Indians too are held to
+have their share in the destruction. There was enough of timber wasted
+and destroyed mile after mile to build a city. The nemesis must come;
+already the alarm has been sounded, and the State authorities here and
+elsewhere are trying to prevent the mischief. I have often had occasion
+to regret my ignorance of botany _inter alia_; but never did I feel it
+more than when I was walking up the road, on each side of which was a
+carpet of flowers, a maze of shrubs and plants--dense brushwood--to not
+one of which could I give a name. We arrived at the Halfway House at
+12.35 as much pleased as the horses which brought us there so well at
+the respite, for it was an awful "pull up," and the coachman did his
+work at high pressure. In the course of our pilgrimage we had found a
+very pleasant _divertissement_. The Major, Mr. White, and Mr. Jerome
+had excellent voices, and from time to time they burst into song,
+giving with great effect the quaint negro melodies, which are now made
+familiar to us in London, from a very large _répertoire_; and so the
+afternoon passed in quiet enjoyment as we climbed the hills on foot or
+in the carriages--snatches of talk, exclamations of wonder and delight,
+and outbursts of the 'Golden Slipper,' 'O! that 'Possum,' 'The Ark,'
+'John Brown,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' and other choruses.
+
+It was near 4 o'clock when the driver, who had been silent for some
+time, looking round at us occasionally as one who would say, "Wait a
+little till I surprise you," suddenly pulling up, said, "Now, here you
+are. This is Fascination Point! Won't you get down a bit?" And, lo!
+there indeed lay before us a scene of indescribable grandeur. I know
+nothing like the effect produced by Yosemite Valley when seen for the
+first time from this point. It has a characteristic which no other
+similar view I am acquainted with possesses. You take in at one glance
+stupendous mountain-ranges, all but perpendicular, beyond which you see
+the snowy crests of the great Sierra, the profound valley between them,
+a long vista of extraordinary magnificence, of cascades and precipitous
+waterfalls, and far down below a silvery river rushing through a
+forest composed of the noblest trees in the world, with patches of
+emerald-green sward and bright meadows.
+
+I see that by a slip of the pen I have miscalled the place from which
+we got our first view of the wondrous scene. But I have a right to
+change the name for my own use. What the driver said was "Inspiration
+Point." I prefer my mistake, for the view inspires you with no feeling
+save that of wonder and delight. These sublime scenes appear to be
+beyond the reach of poetry. Niagara and the Yosemite have not yet
+found a laureate. The peculiar and unique feature of the valley seems
+to me to be the height and boldness of the cliffs which spring out
+from the mountain-sides like sentinels to watch and ward over the
+secrets of the gorge; next to that is the number and height of the
+waterfalls; but it is only by degrees and by comparison that the mind
+takes in the fact that the cliffs are not hundreds, but thousands
+of feet high--that these bright, flashing, fleecy cataracts fall for
+thousands of feet--that the rent which has been torn in the heart of
+the mountains, till it is closed by the awful granite portals beyond
+which no mortal may pass, extends for miles. I thought as I gazed
+that it were pity to descend, lest a nearer view might destroy the
+effect of that _coup d'oeil_; but the driver had regulated the period
+for rapture. He whipped us up to our places by word of mouth, and
+the carriages renewed their course, now striking by bold zigzags down
+into the valley for our destination, which was still six miles away. I
+shall not attempt to describe my own feelings, far less can I pretend
+to tell what others, probably far more susceptible of the beauty and
+grandeur of what we beheld than I am, may have felt at the succession
+of the awe-inspiring revelations of the tremendous grandeur of the
+Valley which came upon us. What is the use of rolling off a catalogue
+of names and figures?--even the brush of the painter, charged with
+the truest colours and guided by the finest hand and eye, could never
+do justice--that is, could never give a just idea of these cliffs and
+waterfalls. "El Capitan! Oh, that's the name, is it? Three thousand
+three hundred feet high!" And then you try to take in what that means.
+"And it's 3500 feet down to the Valley? Dear me!" "And that is the
+Cathedral Rock? And those two peaks are the Spires? I don't exactly see
+the resemblance; do you?"
+
+There was a sort of wail of delight from us all as we came on the
+"Bridal Veil Fall"; and I do not think any one cared to know that it
+was just 60 short of 1000 feet high! Surely one of the most graceful,
+lovely _chutes d'eau_ on earth, lost though it be from view behind the
+rocks at the close of its feathery flight! But there was no stopping to
+look at anything; relentless Fate drove us down and on, till the wheels
+rolled more evenly, and at last we came to the bed of the valley--some
+1800 yards broad, opening out here and there yet wider--and we
+rejoiced in the sight of the bright clear water of the Merced, child
+of innumerable icy mothers, flashing, sparkling, dashing and brawling,
+like a myriad Lodores, between her banks decked with flowers and
+covered with forest trees.
+
+Suddenly there dashed out of a glade two cavaliers, and made full tilt
+at the leading carriage. "To arms!" Not a bit of it! Nor banditti
+or Injuns--of whom we had met one or two riding sullenly along to
+the hunting-grounds--no, only two hotel touts armed with cards of
+self-commendation, and not apparently in much rivalry, for when told
+that we had engaged our hotel, they galloped off to waylay other
+travellers, of whose coming they were apprized by our driver. Our
+hotel, I may say by the way, gave us full contentment. The site was
+admirable, commanding a full and near view of _the_ Fall of Falls--the
+Yosemite--which had so fascinated our eyes that we could scarce divert
+them to any other object--not "Widow's Tears," or "Virgin's Tears,"
+nor the "Three Brothers," not anything but the Yosemite! And so, when
+our rooms were pointed out, we made off to the spot where the fine
+cloudlike vapour rising above the tree-tops indicated the basin into
+which the waters sought rest after their troubled leap.
+
+Our way lay through the usual gathering of stores, hotels, livery
+stables for the horses and ponies needed for the excursions, and
+curiosity dealers' shops, to the village street, as it may be termed,
+shadowed by fine trees, under which reposed some Indians--one of whom,
+an Amazon in yellow toga, went riding full gallop past us, her hair
+falling in a black mat on her shoulders, sitting low, in Melton style,
+regardless of poultry, children, and boulders, and vanishing in a cloud
+of dust under the trees. Then we turned to the left and crossed the
+river by a rustic bridge; and as I looked down into the dancing waters
+certain shadow-like objects flew up against the current. "Trout?"
+asked I. "Yes, they're trout. They take 'em--when they dew--five
+pounds weight. The Injuns catch 'em. We don't understand it as well."
+A short walk, with eyes ever up-turned, and we come out to a moraine,
+and, clambering up over a mass of trunks of trees and decaying timber,
+_the_ Falls were before us--I cannot write more--no adjective will do.
+"Two thousand six hundred and thirty-four feet, mind!" says the voice.
+"I don't care," thought we, "it's the most beautiful and wonderful
+water-jump ever seen by human eye." "It only remains," as they say, to
+state that there is first, falling over a sheet of granite straight as
+a wall, a considerable river, which in the plunge comes down at once
+1600 feet. There, in a basin of rock, it collects its scattered forces,
+under cover of eternal spray and cloud, and then takes another header
+of 434 feet to a barrier of granite, against which it rages for a mad
+moment, till it swells over and escapes from control by another spring
+of 600 feet sheer down--and now it is free, and rushes past at our
+feet, a joyous flashing stream.
+
+We returned through the meadows from the Falls, and as I was walking
+in advance of the party a snake wriggled across the path, which I
+struck at instinctively with my stick, and was lucky enough to kill
+at the first blow. I exhibited the carcass, or whatever a snake's
+dead body may be, in triumph to my companions. Further on our way we
+fell in with an old Frenchman who was carrying a basket of fruit from
+his little garden to the inn. With all the courtesy of his country,
+he offered to Lady Green the choicest in his little _corbeille_. He
+came from Lorraine very long ago to prospect in the States, almost the
+earliest of the pioneers, but he was still strong and active, and he
+pointed with great satisfaction up to a white flag planted on a dizzy
+height above, which he said he had placed with his own hands. The chief
+livery stable keeper is a German named Stegman. The first ascent of the
+Dome was made by a young Scotchman named Anderson, from Montrose; so
+with Indians, Americans, Mexicans, Europeans, there is a very liberal
+representation of the nations of the world, in the season, in the
+valley. Mr. Hutchinson, the Conservator of the Valley--one with all
+the enthusiasm of the American character in everything pertaining to
+the country, aggravated in this instance by an intense admiration for
+the valley over which he is appointed to watch--joined us at dinner in
+the little inn. Full of information, bubbling over with anecdote and
+illustration, and replete with all kinds of knowledge concentrated upon
+the one object--the Valley--the Valley--and nothing but the Valley.
+He knows its history since the time it was first discovered, and its
+natural history and geological formation, and all about the Indians who
+lived there and their traditions. It so happened that the Commissioners
+of the State of California, who are bound to visit the public
+domains, were also at the hotel, and so we had quite an unofficial and
+ceremonious meeting; and presently, as we stood in front of the hotel
+gazing up on the peaks, lighted up by the stars, and listening to the
+thunder of the waterfall, a startling report burst out on the night,
+and in another instant the echoes repeated from rock to rock were
+crashing through the Valley with the roar of heaven's artillery. It
+was the first gun of a salute ordered by the Commissioners to be fired
+in honour of the Duke's arrival. The effect was very fine, but I doubt
+whether I did not feel full of resentment at the outburst, very much as
+the owls and night-hawks might have been expected to feel, if one could
+judge from their cries. However, even a salute and echoes must come to
+an end, and as we were to get up early to start for the Mirror Lake, we
+turned in to bed at an early hour; not, however, to sleep, because the
+indefatigable and numerous company in the public room, off which were
+our bedrooms, were in high spirits, and the song and the dance, to the
+accompaniment of an invalid piano, for some time asserted their sway.
+
+Mr. Hutchinson had the Duke out early, because it is one of the
+obligations to see the sun rise, reflected in the Mirror Lake--if
+you can. There is no fear of cloud or rain. In the Mirror Lake is
+reflected--or was as we saw it--the precipice at the other side of the
+Valley, the bulk of Mount Watkins (so called from a photographer who
+has been daring and successful in his renderings of the Yosemite), and
+all the surrounding scenery. Once a friend and I saw a cow on its back
+in the air, by the shore of a Highland lake. The surface was smooth as
+that of the Mirror before us now. It was flapping its tail from side to
+side, and its forelegs were up in the sky. We could not make it out at
+first. There was, in fact, a cow standing near the water of the loch;
+and what we saw was a reflection of the animal, actually stronger and
+better defined than the object itself. So it was with the reflections
+in the Mirror Lake; but when the sun rose over the cliff and we looked
+at the water, the glare was too dazzling. "It was," as Mr. Wright
+remarked, "like the electric light." There were curious optical effects
+produced, some being troubled with purple, others with green or yellow
+in their eyes, after a vain attempt to look at the reflection, but that
+did not last long.
+
+We returned to breakfast to make an early start for Union and Glacier
+Points on ponies. Among the company at the hotel, introduced by Mr.
+Hutchinson, there was a young lady who was well acquainted with the
+Valley, and who proved to be a very agreeable companion in our mountain
+ride; but it was not long ere she was candid enough to let it be known
+that she did not visit the Yosemite out of love of the picturesque and
+beautiful, but that she was interested in the sale of photographs of
+the Valley, and was, in fact, a very persuasive and efficient agent of
+a firm in San Francisco, who had thus established an outlying picket of
+great activity and vigilance; and I am sure we all hope she may always
+be as successful with the visitors as she was with us. Of what we saw
+from the Glacier Point I must leave others to write or speak. It is
+reached by a zigzag on the mountain-side--a peculium of the maker, and
+all the "trails," as they are called, in the valley are the property
+of individuals or firms who are paid by tariff, and we heard "Eleven
+gone up before--Duke Sutherland, Lady Green, Sir Green, Mr. Wright, Mr.
+Russell, Mr. Jerome coming! Sixteen coming up behind!" On the plateau
+behind the cliffs, from which you look down on the Valley and at the
+snowfields on the mountain ranges opposite, there is a log house and
+shanty, and there we had a mountain meal ere we began the descent.
+
+Nothing in the way of riding is more disagreeable than going down
+a very sharp mountain-side on a pony not, for all you know, very
+sure-footed, and so instead of riding, I resolved to walk, now and
+then taking a short cut, to the great discomfiture of feet and boots,
+although it is three thousand feet to the bottom, and make the best
+of my way and the most of the road, which is very fair, down the zig
+zags. I reached the plain thoroughly hot and tired, and bathed in
+perspiration, in fifty-seven minutes. The horsekeeper, who came down
+with the rest of the party, seemed to have been affected by the rarity
+of the atmosphere or something else up at the mountain hostelry, for
+he insisted on it that I had ridden down, and demanded his horse.
+"What the thunder, Russell, have you done with my horse?" he asked
+again and again. Satisfied for the time by my assurances that I had
+not ridden at all, he went off, and then, thinking over the matter,
+came back again to repeat his question, till I told him I would not
+answer it any more. He was an amusing fellow in his way, and affable.
+He called the Duke "Sutherland," now and then putting Mr. before it.
+As he was watering his horses, he said: "Here, Mister Sutherland, lay
+hold of the bucket, will you, whilst I take a turn at this one." And
+the Duke did so with alacrity. It was a day of incessant activity. No
+sooner had the mountain party come down than they were off again to
+drive through the Valley. The rest of our party had already executed
+masterly investigations at the foot of all the waterfalls; admired
+the Bridal Veil and the Widow's Tear, as one cascade is satirically
+termed, "because," says the guide, "it dries up in six months;" had
+driven and ridden everywhere and seen everything, and we had to do the
+same; but it would need a week of conscientious work to exploit the
+Valley thoroughly. At half-past 7, the dinner hour, the little inn was
+swarming with people; the stage had arrived with fresh contingents.
+Every place was full, and what with the clatter of knives and forks,
+the clamour of waiters, the tumult of voices laughing and talking,
+it was scarcely possible to conceive that a few short years ago this
+valley was in the exclusive possession of the Indian and the wild
+beast. There is now, however, a great conflict of interests, and Mammon
+is holding his revels in the Valley. The State has voted a certain
+sum of money, twenty-five thousand dollars, I think, to buy up the
+interests of the trail-makers; that is, those who struck out and made
+paths to the various objects of attraction; but no success has yet been
+attained in the negotiations, and, indeed, I should think it a very
+bad investment for most of them to accept their share of such a sum.
+Macaulay, for example, who made the path up to the point from which
+we descended to-day, must make many hundreds of dollars in the height
+of the season, as he charges so much a visitor, and, besides, has a
+restaurant where they take their meals at the top.
+
+Next day (June 5th) we left the Yosemite with the satisfactory
+assurance that we had made the most of our time, though we could not
+believe we had done it justice. There were some small "nuages" on the
+face of our "Mirror Lake," caused by changes in the mode of conveyance;
+but we found six horses and one of the coaches of the country were
+better than four horses and two carriages of less capacity. Yosemite,
+I may tell my readers, means "Grizzly Bear" (it may be "Great Grizzly
+Bear"); but we only heard of one having been thereabouts for a long
+time, and I believe it was thoroughly tamed. After a glorious day in
+the woods, clambering up the steep from the Valley, and then on by the
+road--the only one--to Clarke's, halted there for the night, when we
+returned from a ceremonious visit to the "Big Trees." We had a most
+delightful ride from Bruce's, and a hard canter back through the woods
+on capital ponies, full of life and action, and very sure-footed, but
+rather inclined to have their own way, which was not always that of
+the rider. We turned into bed at Bruce's, quite delighted with our
+expedition, and rather anxious to see the road we had traversed in the
+dark by the garish light of day. Every traveller's tale, and every
+guide-book of recent date relating to this part of the world, has a
+full account of the dimensions, number, appearance, and condition of
+these wonders of the world. They are either prostrate, mutilated, or
+decaying; not one has survived the stormy life he must have led for
+some 3000 years--a few hundreds more or less do not signify. Those
+which remain upright are scarred by fire and lightning, and drop their
+monster arms, hung with ragged foliage and sheets of bright moss,
+mournfully over the ground where their trunks will repose in time to
+come. I cannot conceive any object of the kind so magnificent as one
+of those Washingtonias in the full vigour of mature treehood; but we
+could only fancy what it must have been like by measuring the stems,
+for there was not anywhere in the forest a tree to be seen which had
+not suffered. The best way to visit the scene--for it may well be
+called so--is to strike out from the road on the way to the Yosemite
+before the halt at Bruce's; but the hotel-keepers and stage-drivers
+will persuade the stranger, if they can, to defer the excursion till
+his return from the Valley, so as to make a half-day more out of him.
+
+_June 6th._--All up at 5 o'clock, and off soon after 6 A.M. The first
+stage, eleven miles, we did in two hours and ten minutes--a very
+pretty road; the second stage, eight miles, in forty-four minutes. The
+ravages made by fires are most deplorable. We had passed through this
+great forest track in the dark, but now seen in the morning light, the
+trunks of magnificent trees rotting on the ground, or standing upright
+with lifeless arms, consumed at the base, were visible everywhere.
+It is difficult to find out the exact truth about the cause of these
+fires. Some few people said "it was the Indians," but the weight of
+testimony attributes them to the shepherds, who for the most trifling
+purposes kindle a great fire. In some of the large trees they have
+hollowed out regular chambers, and of course the tree dies. Such waste
+of timber! For mile after mile we passed scenes of desolation which
+ere long those who allowed them will have cause to regret. From time
+to time we encountered on the road trains of waggons drawn by teams of
+handsome mules with bells, and had occasion to admire the economy of
+labour exhibited in the management, by which the driver is enabled to
+work a powerful break with one hand whilst he drives with the other.
+The next stage, of fourteen miles, was over an exceedingly bad road;
+but the horses were good, and we rattled along at a capital speed down
+towards the plain. Once the quick-eyed driver, pulling up suddenly,
+said, "See that rattle?" leaped down and made towards the bush; and
+as we followed him, sure enough we heard distinctly the noise of the
+snake, which he had intercepted on its way to a rabbit hole. It took
+refuge in a clump of bushes with gnarled roots, and coiled itself round
+one of the branches; but by a course of judicious and rather nervous
+poking it was driven from its vantage ground, and trying to escape was
+killed by the driver with a blow of his whip, followed by a good many
+unnecessary strokes from the rest of the party. It was over three feet
+long, and had just been making an evening meal upon a rabbit, which it
+had left where we had startled it; and it was evident from its swollen
+appearance that it had been for some time engaged in the warren close
+at hand.
+
+At 10.20 we reached Fresno, which is what the Americans call "quite
+a place," containing not only an hotel, a restaurant, and a store,
+but a shop where photographs were exhibited. The _chef-d'oeuvre_, a
+portrait of a Spanish lady 140 years of age, living at Los Angeles, did
+not, however, commend itself to our taste. We halted at Coarse Gold at
+11.40, and left at 12.35. Mr. Jerry Loghlan--who excused himself for
+not working on the ground that "there was no use in it, as there was
+nothing to be had," the mines being worked "out"--whose acquaintance we
+had made on the way up, a huge, broad-shouldered _vaurien_, was still
+hanging about with his specimens of quartz, gold, and rattlesnakes'
+tails, and a black eye recently acquired in battle.
+
+After a long, hot, and dusty drive, it was with no small gratification
+we made out on the flat the houses of Madera, and after a time the
+carriages of the special train. The air is so bright and pure that the
+distances are very deceptive, and it was nearly 5 o'clock P.M. before
+we reached the station, which had been visible for more than an hour
+previously. It was pleasant news to hear that the little German barber
+at the way-side had got baths all ready. In the rear of his shop there
+was a row of apartments, each provided with a clean zinc bath, hot and
+cold water to turn on at discretion, and an abundance of towels. This
+in the centre of a waste seemed very creditable to the civilisation
+of the people. I should like to know in what part of Europe you would
+get similar comfort under similar circumstances. I am afraid there are
+many parts of the British Islands where a traveller would demand such
+a luxury in vain. And the barber was there to shave those who needed
+it, and to give you all the news of the day if you wanted it. He was
+a Prussian, and he grinned from ear to ear as, in reply to my question
+whether he had served, he said: "Serve, indeed! Not I. I came away and
+escaped from all that nonsense. There is not a king or an emperor or a
+prince that I would fight for. Why should I?" "But," said I, "you would
+have to fight for the Republic here if it were in danger; and that
+would not be fighting for your fatherland." "Yes," said he, "it would,
+for this is my fatherland now. But I do not want to fight for it either
+if I can help it. Fighting is nonsense."
+
+Our excellent stewards received us, if not with open arms, with smiling
+faces. The carriages were trim and clean and fresh, the tables spread
+out, and all kinds of dainties provided for the evening meal. We rested
+quietly for the night in the siding at Madera, and got under weigh at
+5 o'clock on the morning of June 7th, the train being timed so as to
+reach San Francisco at 12.30.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The Real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!"
+
+
+The British Consul, Mr. Booker, who has been watching over the
+interests of the Queen's subjects for some thirty years here, and who
+is an institution by himself, met the train at a place called, I think,
+Porta Costa, and welcomed the Duke and his friends. There had been
+for some days an infusion of the Chinaman in the general element of
+life along the line, but here it became concentrated, and then ceased
+to attract much attention. As the train approached the wide expanse
+of muddy water from the Sacramento, which charges down with impetuous
+volume, and colours the bay with its turbid stream, we could form an
+idea of some of the advantages in the expanse of navigable river, that
+had, however, lain long without appreciation but for the bright red
+gold possessed by San Francisco. The bay is animated; white canvassed
+craft stud its waters, and the smoke of steamers pollutes the clear,
+bracing air. Italian fishermen are busy with line and net, and flights
+of ducks and squadrons of gulls and cormorants show that the waters
+are well stocked. It was too late in the year to see the country in
+the full affluence of its wealth of fruit and crops, of hay and corn,
+and the hillsides and fields are now disappointingly brown. Presently
+we arrived at Oakland, where the train was run out on a pier 3500
+yards long, to the steam ferry-boat which was to convey us across
+to San Francisco. The ferry-boat was crowded, for Oakland is a city
+of some 50,000 people; and of course it had once on a time, not very
+remote, only a few sheds and insignificant houses. From this side of
+the bay the city of the Golden Gate, some miles away, was now visible
+in all its pride of place--pride but not beauty, now at least--for the
+city presents no great attraction to the eye. The streets, running in
+parallel lines at right angles to the quay right up the sandy hillside,
+look like the ribs of some stranded monster, "lank and lean and
+brown." The most prominent object is the hotel to which we are going,
+which towers far over the general level of house-top, steeple, and
+factory-chimney.
+
+There is a little pamphlet, crammed with statistics and with an array
+of figures and superlatives enough to daze one, given to the guests
+of the Palace Hotel; but those who are in that happy category scarcely
+need the information, and those who are not could not derive any idea
+of the building from the repetition of the ciphers which are to be
+found in the guide-book. The drawing on the outside affords the best
+notion of the size, but only actual purview can enable one to judge
+of the excellent arrangements, the service, the table. For once the
+American idol "Immensity" is not overlaid. "'Tis blinding bright--'tis
+blazing white! O Vulcan! what a glow!" Electric lights flooding the
+court with brightness beyond description. And what a court! Sweetness
+and light indeed! In the great quadrangle, 144 feet by 84, there are
+fountains playing, groups of statuary, and exotic plants, and, tier
+after tier, rise the pillared terraces outside the seven storeys of
+which the main building consists, painted a lustrous white, shining
+like purest Parian. There are 755 rooms, abounding in conveniences,
+and comfortably luxurious. Each is provided with high-pressure hot and
+cold water, and there is an elaborate system of ventilation, alarms,
+conductors, pneumatic tubes, telephones, and "annunciators" for fire,
+letters, servants, &c. The beds are excellent; the furniture admirable;
+and this vast structure, 120 feet high, 275 feet broad, and 350 feet
+deep, is not only fire, but--listen--"earthquake proof"; so says the
+bill of fare, and so says ex-Senator W. Sharon, the proprietor. I have
+not the least desire to test the truth of the averment, but if I must
+be in a hotel when an earthquake visits the city in which I am, let me
+be in the Palace, San Francisco. A man may live here in the enjoyment
+of a pretty continuous series of meals and one of the best bedrooms
+for four dollars a day, and there is a lower tariff of bed and board at
+three dollars a day.
+
+_June 8th._--Our first day was rendered exceedingly pleasant by the
+kindness of General McDowell. The weather did its very best to prevent
+our enjoying it, and was signally defeated. San Francisco is perhaps
+the windiest city in the world, and at this time of year there is
+almost always a storm in the harbour, and a steady, powerful, and
+somewhat chilly blast, setting in a little before noon, and lasting
+throughout the day until nearly sundown, up the streets. The General's
+aide-de-camps came over early to the hotel, in full uniform, in honour
+of Major-General Green, but General McDowell appeared in mufti, which
+eased us down a little. A powerful steamer, the "_General Macpherson_,"
+was prepared for the party, which was swollen by a considerable number
+of gentlemen invited by our host to meet the Duke, and the gentlemen
+from Topeka, who were included in the invitation. The excursion
+afforded a favourable opportunity of inspecting the city defences.
+From Alcatraz Fort, Point and Presidio Island batteries, which would
+not be considered very formidable as far as armament is concerned,
+although their position affords great advantages for torpedo defence,
+salutes were fired in honour of Sir Henry Green. But in the case of
+some of us the sight was marred by the rising sea, which increased to
+an inconvenient height as the steamer reached the Seal Rocks, close to
+the entrance to the bay. Of the seals I shall give an account farther
+on. They did not seem to mind the steamer very much until she blew her
+whistle, when many of them splashed into the sea. At the termination of
+the trip, which lasted some four hours, General McDowell entertained
+the party at his official quarters, which are beautifully situated on
+a bluff overhanging the water of the bay.
+
+_June 9th._--We spent, in some respects, an abortive and deceitful
+day; not, indeed, that there was anything disappointing about our
+entertainment at Belmont, under the auspices of ex-Senator Sharon;
+but that we started full of enterprise, and intent upon inspecting the
+great works of the Spring Valley Reservoir, and of making an excursion
+through what was described as a very beautiful county whence is
+brought the water supply of the great city in which we were sojourning.
+However, though we were baulked in the object of our expedition, the
+day passed, and not in the least degree unpleasantly, and instead of
+going to the Lakes we drove about the neighbourhood of Belmont, and
+visited several country seats.
+
+No one who visits San Francisco should omit taking an early opportunity
+of going to Palo-Alto to inspect the stock of General Stanford's
+thorough-breds, and the breeding establishment, which as a sample of
+perfect order and management cannot be surpassed. I cannot answer for
+the figures, but I was informed that the owner spends 25,000_l._ a year
+upon the maintenance of his stud and stables, and that he has not as
+yet sold a colt or filly, or parted with a single animal; sires, mares,
+and young brood now amounting to about 700 head. They are beautifully
+housed in detached stables fitted up with every convenience that a
+horse of the highest pedigree and most luxurious taste can desire.
+I was particularly struck with the perfect silence which prevailed
+throughout the stables. No shouts to "stand over there," and none of
+that "----" (groom's expletive) which is so common in our country.
+And partly owing perhaps to that mode of treatment, and to gentleness
+in handling, all the horses without exception seemed tractable and
+sweet-tempered. High-bred stallions stood out in the open for our
+inspection, and allowed themselves to be rubbed and felt without even
+laying down their ears or raising a hind-leg from the ground. In reply
+to a question respecting a remarkably beautiful animal, which seemed to
+have a little more fire in him, the head groom said "You may walk under
+his belly if you like," and then and there he told one of the grooms
+to do so, which the man did, without attracting any unusual degree of
+attention from the animal. Outside one of the large blocks of stables
+there is a kind of testing arena, in which we were told it was the
+pleasure of General Stanford, when he was at home, to sit watching the
+performance of his young horses. It is an ellipse, like a large circus,
+bordered with a hoarding, and in the centre there is a raised stage for
+the visitors, on which are revolving chairs. The riding-master, with an
+attendant, performing the functions of the late Mr. Widdicombe, sets
+the animal in motion, checking him when he breaks into a gallop. The
+speed at which the animal trots the ellipse is known by the time marked
+on a chronometer, and the fact is recorded for the information of the
+inspectors, who can turn round their chairs and follow the action of
+the horse as it trots round the ring.
+
+The district of the State in which Palo-Alto is situated boasts of
+several residences of the Californian millionaires. One house which
+we visited, I think belonging to Mr. Flood, furnished the most ornate
+and beautiful examples of woodwork that were ever seen by any of the
+party. The house, which was as large as a good-sized English country
+mansion, is constructed of timber of the finest quality, beautifully
+worked, painted and varnished; and with moderate care a mansion of this
+kind will last, in this climate, a couple of hundred years, which to
+the American mind is an eternity. There were artists from New York,
+and the staff of an upholsterer and decorator of great renown from the
+Empire City were still busily engaged in the place as we went through
+the rooms. The magnificent halls, reception-rooms, billiard-rooms,
+library, bedrooms, all fitted up with extraordinary luxuriousness,
+but in a somewhat florid taste, were of wood, the doors of many of
+the apartments arresting attention by their extraordinary beauty and
+finish. The ceilings decorated in fresco by Italian artists, and bright
+windows filled with stained glass gave an appearance of light and
+grace to the whole residence. The kitchen arrangements were marvels
+of ingenuity, and one envied the butler who would have such a pantry
+as that which was displayed for our inspection. Some of the pictures
+which were ready to be placed on the walls were remarkable, however,
+only for the richness of their frames; and, indeed, we heard that
+the excellent proprietor was not a man of very cultivated taste; a
+child of fortune, in the prime of life and of money-making, spending
+a portion of his enormous wealth with an easy hand, but destitute of
+what is called book-learning, and leaving to some future generation the
+cultivation of the graces and the acquirement of accomplishments which
+the circumstances of his early life had denied him to effect.
+
+It had been arranged that we should return to San Francisco to dinner,
+but Senator Sharon had in his secret heart resolved that we should do
+nothing of the kind, or at least, that if we did so, it should only be
+after we had partaken of such a feast at Belmont as would very much
+indispose us to test the capabilities of the _chef_ of the Palace
+Hotel. From Palo-Alto accordingly we were driven to the charming
+country house, some miles away, of the ex-senator of Oregon, and we
+were regaled there, after some delay, at a very elaborate _déjeûner_,
+sent out from San Francisco. It was nigh 8 o'clock ere we got back
+to the city; and the night ended by what might well be called "an
+excursion" to the Baldwin Theatre, which was at the time the most
+attractive of the places of entertainment of that sort open in the
+city. As some of us were walking back, after the play was over, with
+an American friend, talking of the "hoodlums," famous rowdies, who, we
+were assured, had been of late days utterly broken up by the vigilance
+of the police, our attention was attracted to a number of lads smoking
+at the corner of the street. Our friend said "Hoodlums broken up! There
+they are--don't you believe it. That's a lot of them, and if you were
+alone you might find out very unpleasantly that there are plenty of
+them."
+
+The San Francisco journalists possess astonishing powers of
+imagination. I rubbed my eyes when I read that I had described "with
+eloquence the similarity between a marsh at San Bruno and a patch
+of jungle in the north-west of Scinde, where I had the felicity
+of spending three weeks with General Green while the natives were
+arranging a plan to capture the party and cut our throats." I never
+was in the north-west of Scinde in my life, and, although I had the
+pleasure of passing a longer time in his company in the United States,
+and of being on the same plateau before Sebastopol when he was there,
+for a still longer period, many years before, I never spent three
+weeks there with General Green. The Duke was described as "professing,
+but showing, little enthusiasm." However, these matters are of very
+slight interest or importance; only one wonders how many of the readers
+of this sort of literary work believe in it. One of our party has,
+according to a local paper, become a clergyman, and now rejoices in the
+style and title of "the Bishop," by which he is universally addressed
+by the party.
+
+While in the train, on our way to Belmont, I had the pleasure of
+being introduced to a gentleman who, although a lawyer in very large
+practice, is General of the State Volunteers; and in the course of
+conversation, I heard that he had papers containing the statement of
+a gentleman who had visited, and which convinced him that the real
+Roger Tichborne was living not very far from San Francisco. General
+Barnes, whose name and character stand high in the city of the Golden
+Gate, and whom I found to be a gentleman of great intelligence, seemed
+perfectly satisfied by the story told by this new "claimant"; but what
+he mentioned to me did not at all tend to create in my mind any notion
+that he was not an impostor, and especially were my doubts confirmed by
+the quotations which General Barnes made from some of the narrative, in
+which there was a ridiculous jumble of French and English, in order to
+justify, apparently, the stress placed by the "claimant" in his story
+on that part of his life which was passed in France. He spoke of his
+uncle as "mon oncle," and of Thursday as "Jeudi," and so on. However,
+General Barnes appeared to be so impressed by the truthfulness of the
+man's bearing, and by the full details he gave him at an audience
+in which he supplied the facts for the consecutive narrative which
+I was promised, that I expressed a desire to read it. General Barnes
+subsequently sent me a long written paper containing the heads of the
+claimant's story, a perusal of which strengthened the conviction I
+had previously entertained. I only mention this circumstance because
+there was a report spread throughout the Press, by the agency of one
+of the great telegraphic associations which furnish the American
+public with intelligence, that the Duke of Sutherland and myself
+had interviewed the real Roger Tichborne at San Francisco, and had
+satisfied ourselves that he was the man; and innumerable "headings"
+were invented for this supposed interview, of which I was soon made
+aware on my return westward in every newspaper that I read. I promptly
+denied the statement that the Duke or myself had seen the new claimant,
+and although the denial appeared in print I was exasperated day after
+day by being asked questions afterwards with regard to this supposed
+conversation with Tichborne at San Francisco, and by inquiries as to
+my real impression; so it would appear that no one had seen or paid
+any attention to the refutation of the story which had brought down
+on my devoted head communications from friends of other Tichbornes,
+of whom there are several living, some in poverty and others in
+comparative affluence, in various cities and districts of the United
+States. I had further the mortification of seeing it stated in print
+that I had used disparaging words in alluding to the credulity of
+General Barnes, which was an entirely baseless fabrication. With all
+the extraordinary keenness of the American mind generally, there is
+associated with it a considerable amount of the Anglo-Saxon quality
+which is termed "gullibility," and the land swarms with impostors who
+make a living out of the easy faith of the population. I do not speak
+merely of spiritualists, quacks, and professors of peculiar religions
+or medical dogmas, nor of the preachers of eccentric forms of faith or
+unbelief, but of the mass of persons who contrive to get an existence
+by representing that they are "someone else." Although their tricks
+are well known, the trade still flourishes. They are always the "sons
+of peers," who have got into disgrace with their families, but who
+will eventually be owners of castles of historic fame and of enormous
+estates; "distinguished soldiers"; "Maids of Honour to the Queen,"
+who for some unknown reasons are living in small out-of-the-way
+villages in the West; or political conspirators who have played a great
+part on some distinguished stage and have saved themselves from the
+consequences of defeated enterprize by taking refuge in the States.
+And then there are hordes of persons who are known by the title of
+"confidence men," who travel about on the trains or in the steamers,
+looking out for victims, or lounging about the bars and saloons,
+waiting for their prey in the shape of some facile and easy-eared
+stranger, who in consideration of their merits and distress shall give
+them temporary assistance. Sometimes, doubtless, there are cases of
+very real suffering, sorrow, and poverty, to which exile in the United
+States affords a melancholy refuge. I was obliged to hear in one great
+city of a gallant soldier who, reduced to poverty by no fault of his
+own, had quitted England and given up the society of his friends,
+and lived in a small suburb of a town on the coast of the Pacific,
+his secret known only to one or two officials, shunning all contact
+with his countrymen and evading as far as possible all inquiries of
+his friends. In San Francisco, where there is a poor-house open to
+strangers and to native-born Americans alike, there are, I am told, to
+be met with extraordinary exemplifications of the "downs" of fortune.
+Adventurous and daring spirits, and pioneers of civilisation, at one
+time probably possessed of wealth which was wasted in dissipation,
+or lost in unfortunate speculations, are there, talking of the days
+that are gone, in all languages of the world, and awaiting their end;
+while others who started with them in the same race are building their
+palaces or revelling in the enjoyment of wealth, compared to which our
+greatest fortunes are, if figures can be trusted, a mere bagatelle. How
+rapidly some of these fortunes can be made was illustrated by numerous
+stories connected with some of the richest men in California. I was
+told by an eminent tradesman of San Francisco that one day a miner came
+into his establishment to buy a watch, which he said must be cheap
+and good, for he wanted something he could trust to in the matter of
+time, as he was going off with a party on an exploring expedition
+after gold. This was in the early time of the great "booms" in the
+West. He selected a watch, for which he paid $40, and departed. The
+following day he appeared in the shop and asked to see the proprietor,
+and then, producing the watch, he said he would like to have $30 for
+it, as he had lost all his money in a "spree" the night before and
+must have something to start with. The jeweller said, "Well, I will
+return you what you gave me for the watch, as it has suffered no harm,
+and you shall have your $40 back again." The man went away exceedingly
+rejoiced, and the incident was forgotten. Some eighteen months
+afterwards a man came to the establishment, and looking at rings, gold
+chains, and jewellery of the most costly character, and asking for the
+best of everything that they had got, gave orders which occasioned the
+attendant to have some doubts as to his sanity, or certainly as to the
+means he had of paying the amount, which was rapidly running up to tens
+of thousands of dollars. So he sought out his principal. The strange
+customer said, "I suppose you don't know me?" which was admitted to
+be the case. He went on buying all the same, making the remark, "You
+need not be uneasy about the money, for So-and-so (the bankers) will
+tell you I am all right, and when you send the things home you shall
+be paid. I am Joe Smith, from whom some time ago you took a watch he
+bought from you when he came to your store, and gave him the full value
+for it when he was in want of money," and so departed, having shown his
+gratitude by buying 6000_l._ worth of jewellery. This worthy miner is
+now one of the wealthy pillars of the State.
+
+The Chinese quarter of San Francisco has been described, I will not say
+_ad nauseam_, but as often as any book has been written which contains
+an account of a visit to the city of the Golden Gate. Of course we
+went there, and saw all that was to be seen under the best possible
+auspices, for Mr. Bee, whom I have already mentioned, was our guide
+and companion, assisted by an exceedingly intelligent officer of the
+police force; and on the occasion of our second visit, when we went to
+the theatre, we had the advantage of being under the protection of the
+gentleman who represents law and order, on behalf of the municipality,
+in connection with the Chinese population and the arrangements for
+theatrical performances.
+
+The inspection of the dreadful den in which the opium-smokers were to
+be seen suggested to my mind a train of thought in connection with the
+traffic which I would not willingly have communicated to my American
+friends. It will seem incredible some day to the awakened conscience
+of the nation that we should have ever sanctioned such a frightful
+crime as the opium traffic. "It only poisons about two millions of
+people," is the excuse, "and brings in one-sixth of the whole revenue
+of India." If ever it were justifiable to utter the exclamation "Perish
+India!" it would be, I believe, in regard to that disgraceful source of
+revenue, and the necessity that is imposed upon us, as it is alleged,
+to raise it, in order to maintain the government of our Indian empire.
+Here in San Francisco the State has nothing to do with the sale of the
+poison, and it is very questionable whether the police regulations
+should not be applied to it, just as they are to persons who have
+tried to commit suicide, or to the inebriates in public-houses, or to
+places where intemperance is carried on to an extent injurious to the
+public peace. Death is the inevitable result of continued indulgence
+in opium-smoking, although it is true that in some cases the victim
+lingers on a few years, utterly indifferent to all the business of life
+except the one--the means of supplying himself with his only source
+of enjoyment. I was in one of the shops where they sell the drug, and
+was much struck by the cadaverous, sunken faces of the unfortunate
+customers, with bright dreamy eyes, trembling limbs, and wasted bodies,
+who came in to buy it. It is cheap enough, in all conscience, as a very
+small quantity suffices to produce what is called "the desired effect";
+but for its bulk it is exceedingly dear, and indulgence in it must
+consume a considerable amount of the earnings of the best-paid artisans
+when they are no longer able to earn sufficient to keep them with a
+full supply. "Then," as our informant says, "they will commit any crime
+to get it."
+
+The general impression made upon me by the appearance of the Chinese
+population was most favourable. I do not now speak of what one might
+see in going through the haunts where the police regulations assign
+exclusive possession to certain classes of the population, which, sooth
+to say, seemed numerous enough; I refer to the business quarters, and
+to the crowds of cleanly, intelligent, well-behaved people of both
+sexes in the streets. General McDowell, and many other persons, for
+whose opinion the greatest respect must be entertained, look with
+apprehension on the effect of the Chinese immigration, and have,
+indeed, declared that it will destroy the Union if it be not checked;
+and these apprehensions are based upon the possibility that in time
+millions on millions of the swarming population of China will inundate
+the United States, gradually overrun town after town, usurping all
+the fields of labour, and beating down the white man to the greatest
+misery by competition in every branch of trade, industry, and labour.
+This party has successfully, I believe, impressed its views upon a
+considerable number of senators and representatives in the Eastern
+States, who can exercise pressure on the Supreme Government; and
+the treaty recently signed between the Republic and China contains
+provisions which enable the authorities at the western seaports to
+exercise considerable control over the current of emigration. But, on
+the other hand, it is alleged that the fears which are expressed of
+a rapidly increasing exodus of Chinese from China, and an anabasis
+into the United States, are purely imaginary--in fact, unreal and
+pretentious. The pro-Chinese party allege that the emigration comes
+from only one port in one province, and that you may go all over the
+West, and ask any Chinaman or Chinawoman where he or she comes from,
+and you are met with the invariable answer, from the one port. The
+friends of the Chinese--arguing, moreover, that the State at large
+is benefited enormously by the accession to its resources from the
+Celestial Empire, and that the labour was attacked, not because it
+was cheap, but because it was good; that it is now indispensable, for
+without Chinamen and Chinawomen it would be almost impossible to carry
+on the ordinary life of these cities--allege that the agitation which
+has been so violent in San Francisco is mainly encouraged by those
+who want to secure the Irish vote. Colonel Bee represents these views
+very strongly. He argues that Canton, not larger than the State of
+New Hampshire, is the sole source of emigration. He insists on it that
+there are no more than 100,000 Chinese in the whole of the Union, and
+that for the last ten years the emigrants have not sufficed to fill
+the places of those who had gone home with money, never intending to
+return, or who had died. He maintains, indeed, that the Chinese are
+decreasing rather than otherwise; and with all the power of figures,
+which he has at his fingers' ends as Consul, demonstrates that a very
+large proportion of the Chinese who are entered as arriving at San
+Francisco and other parts are the same men and women as those who came
+some years previously and went back to their native country, returning
+to gain more dollars.
+
+The principal enemies of the Chinese are the Irish, who, having
+monopolised the whole of the work of bricklayers, plasterers, carters,
+porters, and general labourers until their arrival, have been forced
+to reduce their rates of labour steadily by the competition of the
+Chinaman.
+
+The part of the population of San Francisco denominated the Sand lot,
+and especially those connected with the political associations of the
+city, do not by any means share Colonel Bee's views; but the agitation
+is dying out, and the meetings, which were of weekly occurrence, to
+excite the people against the Mongolians have decreased in number,
+importance, and interest. The directors of public companies, and
+the contractors for public works, are all in favour of the Chinese
+workman, who is sober, industrious, and orderly; and although the trade
+combinations among them are exceedingly subtle, and their powers of
+association for trade purposes remarkable, being moreover the most
+ancient in the world, the Chinese in the Western States have not as
+yet taken to indulge in the luxury of strikes. As domestic servants,
+nurses, and attendants on children, they appear to be affectionate
+and careful; and nothing could be better than the service of the hotel
+in which we were lodged, the great portion of which was carried on by
+Chinamen and women.
+
+_June 10th._--In the spacious courtyard of the Palace Hotel, at
+7 o'clock this morning, there might have been observed three
+well-appointed waggons (as Americans call the vehicle more
+appropriately termed "spider" at the Cape), each with two horses
+of race, fast trotters, panting for a spin through the city and the
+Park out to the shores of the Pacific. The Duke and Sir H. Green and
+Mr. Stephen were driven by Mr. Howard. Mr. Wright was "personally
+conducted" by Mr. ----, and I was put behind a pair of as handsome
+chestnuts as could well be seen anywhere, of which the owner and
+driver (General Barnes) was very reasonably proud. The streets of
+San Francisco, like those of most of the American cities we have
+visited, are atrociously paved; the torture of driving over boulders
+is aggravated by the sharp ribs of the tram ways, so that it is not
+pleasant, if, indeed, it be possible, to drive rapidly till the limit
+of municipal incompetence or fraud be passed. But once out on the
+suburbs the chestnuts were invited to step it, and were bowling along
+at a good fourteen miles an hour on our way to the Park, over as good
+a road as horse or man ever felt under hoof or foot. The Park not long
+ago was a waste of sand, it is now swarded and planted with shrubs, and
+luxuriant with flowers. Notices that it was unlawful to do more than
+ten miles an hour were posted up, but the General did not pay strict
+attention to them till he came near shady places, where experience
+warned him that policemen might be lying privily in ambush. The pace
+was quickened till the waggon seemed to fly through the air rather
+than move over the ground. It was the perfection of travelling on
+wheels--almost as buoyant as a headlong gallop. The waggon weighed but
+180 lb., the powerful animals "scarcely felt it more than their tails."
+I had a turn at the reins by "kind permission" of the General. The art
+of driving trotters needs practice. You must keep a strong, steady
+pull on the head, or they "break." Very soon I had the satisfaction
+of making the chestnuts break the law with a vengeance, and of hearing
+the General say, "We are just within the three minutes! not ten seconds
+inside it!"--that is, of trotting at the rate of just twenty miles an
+hour. Up hill and down hill, and along the flat out of the Park and
+over the smooth road, and in half an hour the Pacific was in sight, and
+the murmurs of the surf rose above the rhythm of the regular beat of
+the eight hoofs in front of us! Cliff House was in view. Seal Rocks,
+in their setting of foam, lay before us, and in forty minutes from the
+time we left the hotel, despite policemen, miles of bad pavements, and
+tramways, we drew up at the steps of Cliff House, nine miles from San
+Francisco, and the trotters had not turned a hair. From the verandah
+at the sea front of the hotel, we enjoyed for half an hour a spectacle
+which is, as far as I know, unique. At the distance of 500 or 600 yards
+from the beach at our feet there is a group of four very rugged rocks,
+with serrated edges and tops, the sides broken here and there into
+ledges and small platforms. They are too small to be called islands,
+the largest being, as it seemed, not 100 yards wide. The slopes are
+not, I think, so steep as they looked on the land side. On the two
+largest of these rocks there were herds of sea-lions, so close that we
+could see, through very poor opera-glasses, with the greatest ease,
+their eyes, teeth, and whiskers, as they reposed or played with each
+other. Some had clambered to the highest ledges, escalading the sides
+by a series of painful-looking struggles with their flappers; others
+were fast asleep in cosy nooks; some were tossing their heads about and
+making believe to bite each other in sport; the younger ones were bent
+on teasing their fathers and mothers by uncouth gambols. As they played
+or moved they uttered cries between a bark and a roar; now and then the
+noise was like that of a pack of hounds in full cry, and the effect of
+the strange sound mingling with the tumult of the surf and the beat of
+the waves was most singular and "eldrich." Those fresh from the sea
+were shining black, but became lighter as they dried. The older ones
+were not darker than cinnamon bears or unwashed sheep. As many of those
+on the rocks had not long left the water the general effect of the
+herd put one in mind of a gathering of enormous slugs on cabbages--not
+a poetic simile, but a just one, I think. Occasionally a sea-lion,
+hungry or bored by his companions, threw himself with a splash into the
+wave, and it was interesting to watch the rapidity and actual grace of
+his movements in the sea compared with his laborious efforts on the
+land. One could see them quite clearly through the body of the heavy
+billows; occasionally a bold one would glide close on shore and fish
+in the edge of the surf, raising his head and shoulders clear above
+the surface, and then diving out of sight. They were cruising about
+in every direction. You remember the sea-lion at the Zoo, of which the
+French attendant was so fond? Well, the creatures below and before us
+were most of them double the size of that fellow, and several exceeded
+the largest ox in size. The monsters are quite well known; one is named
+Ben Butler, "because he is such a great beast." They were formerly
+protected by law, but some one thought they killed too many fish, and
+the law was repealed. They are safe all the same, for there is a law
+against the discharge of firearms within 300 yards of an inhabited
+dwelling; Cliff House throws its ægis over the sea-lions in that wise;
+but the quantity of fish which must be devoured by these mountainous
+phocæ (an they be so) daily would maintain a decently-sized city. The
+hide furnishes the "sealskin" used to cover trunks, and the body yields
+oil fat, and the tusks are close, white, and hard. These sea-lions
+breed far away up north, and come with their young regularly every
+year to the same resorts; but incessant war is waged upon them by the
+sealers and whalers, so that the chances are against the beast where he
+is not protected by law, and their numbers do not increase. Altogether,
+the spectacle was one never to be forgotten. A hotel, with oysters
+awaiting us for a forebreakfast refection in the background, waggons
+from Michigan, horses from Kentucky, all the apparatus of civilised
+life close at hand, the Pacific and its strange wild denizens at our
+feet! "Let us turn in and have an oyster." "What! oysters in June?"
+"Yes, and good ones too." In this favoured land oysters are in season
+all the year round. There are no oysters found on the coast, I am told,
+and they will not breed. They are brought all the way from the Atlantic
+coast when they are mere oysterlets, and they are laid down in the
+Pacific, where they grow fat and large, but are not "crossed in love,"
+and therefore are fit to be eaten from January to January. They are
+about the size of a spring chicken, and need some courage on the part
+of an assailant who desires to dispose of them as he would a native.
+
+This was our last day in the city of the Golden Gate, and the
+photographers were masters of the situation; and there was much
+_débris_ of sight-seeing to sweep up--visits to be made, shops to be
+inspected, among which I must mention specially the Diamond Palace
+of Colonel Andrews, one of the handsomest jeweller's "stores" in
+the world, though it is not as large as the establishments of the
+principal firms in London, Paris, Vienna, or as Tiffany's in New
+York. The distinctive feature of the interior is the decoration of the
+paintings of fair women, on the ceiling and the walls above the cases,
+by necklaces, diadems, zones, and other feminine ornaments of real
+diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and pearls. The pictures are the work of
+an Italian artist of merit, and the general effect is very striking;
+but I doubt whether it is a good way of inducing people to buy the
+articles which bedeck the ideal beauties. At Bradley and Rulofson's
+we saw photographs of many of our friends, and had one more proof of
+the smallness of the world. Every one we knew seemed to have visited
+San Francisco. There we all submitted to inevitable fate, and left our
+negatives behind us, but the Duke was captured by a rival photographic
+institution, and had a sitting all to himself.
+
+The aspect of a crowd in a large American city differs from that of
+the passers-by in the street of an English town, most of all in the
+appearance of such a large proportion of coloured people. Here it may
+be said, however, that they are colourless, as the prevailing hue of
+the foreign population is that of the Chinaman. In Canada the number
+of negroes, or of persons of negro descent, of varying gradations of
+colour, is remarkable, considering the circumstances, but they probably
+may be accounted for by the emigration in the olden times of those
+who were escaping from slavery, or who went with their masters and
+employers into the Dominion. In the cities on the Lakes I was very
+much struck by the persons of undoubted African descent who are to
+be met with in the streets in great numbers; and in Chicago there is
+a quarter nearly exclusively occupied by them--honest, industrious,
+hard-working people seemingly, given to stand about at the street
+corners, however, a good deal on Sundays, and cultivating a bright
+attire, especially on the part of the ladies, whose bonnets and
+shawls were things to wonder at. There are loafers amongst them, as
+there are amongst their betters; but, taking them all in all, in the
+Northern, Western, and Atlantic States, they are a decidedly useful
+element in the population, easing the burden of labour to the white
+man, and following many occupations, such as those of waiters, barbers,
+bricklayers, and labourers in the less skilled sort of work, for which
+it would be difficult to find American substitutes. One peculiarity,
+which may be accounted for by some wiser person than myself, seems to
+be their recklessness as to what they put on their heads. Whether it
+is merely a compliance with the custom of the white man, which impels
+them to cover the highly effective protection against sun and cold
+which Nature has given them, or not; or whether it is that the canons
+of taste in such matters have not yet settled down to those accepted
+by people in civilised life in the Western world, the male negro has
+the most extraordinary indifference as to the quality and shape of the
+thing which he calls a hat or cap, and it would not be easy to find out
+of the gutters of some Irish country town anything more dilapidated,
+battered, and utterly incoherent than some of the hats which one may
+see on the heads of people of colour, especially down South. Whatever
+other virtues they may have, neatness is not amongst them; for, with
+all their affectation of finery, their clothes are generally ill-kept,
+their houses are unkempt, and, where they are cultivators of the soil,
+the operations are performed in a slovenly manner. The traditions of
+the old plantation have descended upon them, and influence them.
+
+On my way from Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the bankers in Montgomery
+Street--I believe the former of these gentlemen has had the
+privilege of giving his name to steamers and cities, leastways
+railway stations--I saw a party of sailors belonging to the United
+States steamer "_Rodgers_," now about to proceed in search of the
+"_Jeannette_," and I was much struck by their resemblance to our own
+bluejackets in general "cut of the jib," dress, face, and figure.
+They were in charge of a smart-looking officer, and had been paying a
+farewell visit to the fruit and vegetable markets--one of the sights of
+the city. They were in high good-humour, laughing and chatting loudly,
+more than is the wont of Americans, and I could not but contrast
+their fine physique with that of the soldiers we had seen at Sir Henry
+Green's parade when General McDowell took us round the harbour. The
+detachment at the Fort, consisting of infantry and artillerymen, and
+squads of different regiments, had some weedy veterans in the ranks,
+who had lost their setting up and did not look fit for much work; but
+the sailors, probably a picked lot, were good all round.
+
+_À propos_ of Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the number of wealthy
+men in San Francisco of Irish origin or nationality is remarkable.
+Millionaires with names of Milesian prefixes and terminations are
+phenomenal. We had intended to return to the East Coast by way of Utah,
+and to stay a day or two at Salt Lake City, but the railroad company
+did not consider it expedient to give the party the facilities which
+had been accorded in every other instance by the American authorities
+to the Duke and his friends. To have gone round Salt Lake City would
+have cost a couple of hundred pounds more for haulage, and we were
+much more interested in seeing Leadville and Denver than the City of
+the Mormons; the game was not thought to be worth the candle, and
+it was resolved that we would go back as we came, in charge of the
+representatives of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad Company.
+It was only one item more in the long list of things we ought to have
+seen if we could, and I can safely say that we had a large share of the
+common experience of travellers in regard to the relations between the
+possible and the impossible in the course of a journey in a strange
+land, where there are for ever cropping up representations that "you
+really ought not to leave without seeing" so and so. The evening of our
+last day was passed in the society of General McDowell, Mr. Morgan,
+the English Consul, Colonel Bee, and others, who had done so much to
+make the visit to San Francisco all that could be desired, and whose
+courtesy and kindness will ever be remembered by every one of us most
+gratefully. Like Sir Charles Coldstream, we "had seen everything,
+done everything," but, unlike him, had found there was plenty in it.
+The street railway--most ingenious and successful, invaluable in a
+hilly city like Lisbon--the Chinese Theatre, the Joss houses--shops,
+eating-houses, opium dens of the Chinese quarter, the clubs, the
+principal buildings, the streets, the shops, the markets, the harbour,
+the suburbs, and country round about--all had been inspected, and
+yet each day we were told that we were doing positive injustice to
+ourselves and to the objects which were perforce neglected. In the
+morning there was a levée in the hotel to bid the Duke good-bye and
+see the party start on their return journey. At the very last moment a
+gentleman came forward with a proposal to take us to the North Pole by
+balloon, but there was not time to consider it in all its bearings and
+the offer was declined with thanks. We started at 10 A.M., and the Duke
+was attended to the boat and to the station across the water by a large
+body of San Franciscans, who took leave ere the train started. The
+gentlemen who were with us on the journey westwards attended the Duke
+on his way towards the Eastern States. All day we travelled through
+California--"the hot furnace"--which at first, however, proved to be
+only very warm, and the coloured servants had constant supplies of iced
+compounds to be drunk for the solace of the homeward bound, and had
+laid in a stock of San Franciscan luxuries to soothe the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Cañon.
+
+
+_June 12th._--The train stopped at Los Angeles at six in the morning,
+and, drawing up my window-blind, the first person I saw on the platform
+was our good friend Colonel Baker, who had come to meet us, intent
+on the good offices which he could render during our stay. These were
+exhibited in the form of a beautiful bouquet for Lady Green, baskets
+of limes and oranges, and great bunches of grapes. In this happy valley
+there are cares as in the rest of the world. The Colonel told us he was
+in the midst of a great litigation affecting his claim to a large tract
+of land in which there are said to exist the richest tin-mines in the
+American Continent. Yet why should he care about his tin-mine? There
+were rolling acres rich with corn and fruit, and there were flocks and
+herds and vineyards, and a charming home of his own. Nevertheless, if
+the want of that tin-mine made him at all unhappy, I am sure those who
+were indebted to him, as we were, for so many kindnesses, will wish his
+claim to be triumphantly asserted, and long possession of all that is
+to follow.
+
+I dreaded the passage of the Desert to Yuma; and indeed the heat was
+intense. No wonder that with the thermometer ranging from 100° to 104°,
+all the blinds in the car were pulled down, and we sprawled listlessly
+on the cushions. Our excellent attendants put forth all the resources
+of art in the shape of ice and preparations of limes and cocktails;
+but the temperature would not be baffled. We could just read, and were
+aware that we were living, and some of us had strength enough now and
+then to execute forays against flies with napkins to drive them out
+of the carriages. How could people live out in the open, and work in
+the mines, or pursue any out-of-door employment in such torrid heat?
+Nevertheless, there was a marked distinction between it and the heat to
+be endured with the mercury at an equal height in India.
+
+The speed of the train was very respectable--somewhat over twenty miles
+an hour--and at that rate we ran from San Gorgonio and Banning on to
+Cabazon, through a flat plain, dry and burnt up, very like the desert
+around Suez, and fringed, like it, with rocky and rugged hills, save
+that there was a great growth of Spanish bayonets and cactuses of all
+kinds among the stones and sand, and that snow was to be seen on all
+the hill-tops in the distance. For 107 miles there was no water to
+be met with going along this plain; but the mirage, of which I have
+spoken in the account of our journey to San Francisco, was frequent
+and beautiful; and again I was fascinated by the sight of lovely lakes
+embowered in trees, with stately cities on their shores, changing and
+shifting and melting away, only again to assume apparent substance to
+cheat the senses.
+
+Once the train stopped to allow the passengers to visit the
+mud-geysers, which were not more than 150 yards on the left of the
+line, and with commendable curiosity most of us got out and walked
+over the baked earth to the spot. There was no mark whatever of smoke
+or vapour to indicate the place; and it was almost startling to come
+suddenly upon a kind of pond of semi-liquid mud, fifty or sixty feet
+in diameter, on which huge bubbles, varying in size from an orange to
+a hogshead, were continually forming and bursting. There was a faint
+sulphurous smell, and the ground around the liquefied portion of the
+surface, where the bubbles were breaking, was hot and cracked. The
+conductor said that all attempts to reach the bottom of the holes
+through which the bubbles arose had failed. Two of these geysers
+were in active operation, and the plain away to the left of the rail
+was said to contain a great number of them. After all it was very
+unsatisfactory to see this ebullition going on without being able to
+account for it; and, generally, I think we thought less of each other
+and of our information after visiting them, and finding out that not
+one of us had any theory on the subject which would bear either fire or
+water.
+
+I do not think I ever saw a sunset more beautiful than that which
+marked the close of this day--certainly not in India or South Africa,
+nor on the prairie, for which they make claims of surpassing beauty in
+the matter of sunsets. As it died out, I felt that "thing of beauty"
+could not "be a joy for ever," for it was a combination of colour and
+of form, including sky and mountain, that it would be impossible to see
+again.
+
+The kindness of which we have had so many proofs, has followed,
+accompanied, and preceded us all unremittingly and unweariedly. A
+rough with some Bourbon on board mounted to-day the steps of the
+car at a station, and insisted on seeing "this Duke." When he was
+told that the object of his attention was engaged, he said, "This
+is a land of liberty (as in his case it was), and he doesn't want a
+bodyguard with him!" But the conductor sent him away about his business
+without trouble. On the platform at Benson a few miners asked "the
+Duke to come out and show himself." The people at the stations were
+generally satisfied with a quiet peep; now and then an enthusiastic
+Scotchman claimed a shake hands, which was always accorded to him. A
+sleeper placed across the rails (accounted for by the officers on the
+hypothesis that some loafer without a ticket had been turned off by the
+conductor, and had put the sleeper in the way of the train to wreak
+his vengeance--a thing which has occurred nearer home) was the only
+substantial danger to which we were here exposed.
+
+The heat (June 13th) was intense. The thermometer rose to 105 at one
+o'clock in the day, and it was little comfort to us to be told that at
+Deming it had been up to 110 the day before.
+
+For some days we have been supping full of horrors, indeed
+breakfasting and dining on them, for the papers contain accounts of
+the extraordinary homicides all about this region. Tucson, Benson,
+Wilcox--all these places were resounding with the exploits of "Billy
+the Kid." Now at Tucson there is, I believe, a man whose name was once
+amongst the very foremost in the United States. Who some twenty years
+and more ago had not heard of General Fremont, "the Pathfinder," the
+adventurous traveller, the energetic politician, the dashing soldier?
+He had gone at the outbreak of the war to take up the chief command
+in the west with all the pomp and circumstance of glorious war. I was
+somewhat astonished to find that he was at Tucson, the governor of the
+Territory, on a humble salary, apparently the world-forgetting and
+the world-forgot, while "Billy-the-Kid" was perpetrating numberless
+atrocities under his nose, and Mr. Pat Garrett was dressing up his
+loins with his revolver-belt, and about to go forth with a chosen band
+of citizens and seek the redoubtable William.[A]
+
+A person who has only seen settled States in Europe, or the Eastern
+States of the North American Continent, cannot form any notion of a
+territory which has become a centre of attraction to all the wild
+adventurers and daring spirits which society, in the process of
+formation, throws out as a sort of advanced guard. In Arizona, in
+1870, according to the American Almanac, out of a total population
+of 9658, 2729 could not write and 2690 could not read. Of the total
+population, 2491 were foreign born, and 2753 were natives, the rest
+being coloured or under ten years of age. In New Mexico, out of 91,000
+people, 48,000 over ten years of age could not read, and 51,000 whites
+over ten years of age could not write. It may be inferred from such
+figures what is the general condition of the labouring classes in these
+States and Territories. The inhabitants of these States have doubled
+in the last ten years. They are filling up at a rate inconceivably
+great--so great, indeed, that American newspapers are fairly bewildered
+and American statesmen appalled by the rush across the Rocky Mountains
+and down the rivers, although as yet but a small proportion of the
+immense stream of immigrants has flooded the outlying territories. "At
+this rate," exclaims a Western editor, "the old monarchies of Europe
+will soon be depopulated." When Mr. Lincoln, in 1861, addressed his
+inaugural to the expectant States he expressed his confident belief
+that there were children then born who would live to see the flag of
+the Union floating over no less than 100,000,000 of human beings. The
+recent census of the United States gives a return of 51,000,000 of
+people, but the most eminent statisticians have arrived at the belief
+that the progress and increase of the States will not be at the same
+rapid rate as that which marked the history of the Republic since the
+cessation of the great civil war. It may be fairly inferred, however,
+that at the end of this century the population of the United States
+will greatly exceed that of Russia, or that of any empire except
+China and Great Britain, including Hindostan. The population, on
+each period of ten years, has increased at an average of more than
+30 per cent.; in fact, nearer 33 per cent., and the centre of it has
+travelled westward at the rate of more than fifty miles every ten
+years, till the centre of population is now eight miles west by south
+from Cincinnati. In 1800 the Union extended over only 239,935 square
+miles. Its flag now floats over 1,272,239 square miles of States and
+over 1,800,000 square miles of Territory governed by the central power
+at Washington. "We cannot think," exclaims a Republican writer, "that
+the war of rebellion settled all our troubles and made us secure in
+our Republic. This enormous growth of the practically unknown West
+reveals to us the grave dangers that threaten our nation. We meet
+there the tremendous influences of alien races and alien religions."
+The Americans of New England and of the Eastern States do not feel
+anxious on that score, because their institutions are thoroughly
+founded, their character formed, and they trust to the great power of
+accomplished facts to assimilate the alien elements and sustain the
+fabric of the Republic. The bugbear of a great Chinese immigration
+has ceased to practically influence Californian politics, and it may
+be safely assumed that the bulk of the future immigrants from the
+Celestial Empire will only come from the same sources as those which
+have hitherto supplied the stream. No wonder, however, that thoughtful
+Americans--and there are many who think of the future of their country
+as something quite apart from dollars--are filled with grave anxieties
+when they see such floods of purely foreign material, which will in
+all probability exercise a preponderating influence over the politics
+of the Great Republic, surging into the States. Particularly have the
+home missionary clergy, as they are styled, been struck by the enormous
+influence which this foreign immigration has exercised. According
+to one authority, the Rev. Mr. Stimson, of Worcester, "it is not a
+question of spreading any particular form of Christianity or of Church
+government, but a momentous struggle of American institutions with
+alien civilisations and religions for the control of the great Western
+country. The problem is not a matter of cleaning door-yards, but of
+saving a continent for freedom." The Chinese Question and the Indian
+Question are, they think, as nothing compared with the Irish Question
+and the German Question. "The Republic," we are told, "stands on a
+foundation as broad as humanity itself," whatever that may mean, "but
+its condition of existence is a universal regard for the interests of
+all." Often during the course of the Duke of Sutherland's excursion
+it was our good fortune to fall in with men of great political and
+social knowledge. The future of the Republic is, in the mind of these
+men, clouded with uncertainty and doubt. They are apprehensive of
+some unknown danger. It may be corruption of political life leading
+to want of faith in free institutions; it may be the rival energies
+and the opposing interests which Washington foresaw as likely to array
+the East against the West--the Atlantic States against the inland
+States, and it is calculated by some sanguine people that before this
+century is over there will be eighteen, or possibly twenty, States
+admitted into the Union formed out of the Territories which are now
+under the central Government at Washington. Upon such influences as
+these alien immigration may be expected to act with prodigious power.
+At a recent meeting in Springfield a clergyman gave as an illustration
+of the absolute indifference of the foreign immigrants to Republican
+institutions a conversation he had with a Norwegian minister in
+Minneapolis. "There is nothing," said this gentleman, "in America which
+we Norwegians regard as of value except your land and your money. We
+do not want to learn English: we do not want to know the Americans
+around us; we have certainly no notion of becoming Americans, but we
+intend to remain as we are--Norwegians." The Mormons control Utah. They
+boast that they will soon govern five of the most important territorial
+regions beyond the Rockies. But if Utah becomes a State, as she hopes
+to do, she will found a Mormon code of laws and institutions beyond the
+power of the United States to control. New Mexico may be considered as
+a Roman Catholic State under the control of an excellent archbishop. Of
+course all prophecies may be falsified by events, but judging by the
+eighty years which have elapsed of the present century, and from the
+ratio of increase in that time in the United States, the most liberal
+construction may be placed even upon the bounding estimates of American
+politicians and statists. When we look to the Far West and see, for
+instance, how Winnipeg has become the centre of a great network of
+river navigation, 300 miles in one direction, 600 miles in another,
+and that the Mackenzie River passes for 1200 miles through what is
+declared to be the future wheat region of the world, we may easily
+comprehend the anxiety with which the patriotic American is filled lest
+the future of such a State should fall into hands antagonistic to the
+principles in which his _beau idéal_ of government has been founded and
+has prospered.
+
+_June 14._--At Lamy, a station named after the good archbishop of Santa
+Fé, where we halted for a short time whilst the passengers of another
+train were breakfasting, a citizen came up to me on the platform and
+exclaimed, as if he were very much impressed by the news he was going
+to give, "If you look in there, sir, you will see Bob Ingersoll at
+breakfast!" I asked whether there was anything very remarkable about
+the fact. "Well, sir," he said, "he is Colonel Ingersoll, of whom you
+have heard. He is the most remarkable in-fidel in the United States,
+and I really think he believes what he preaches. A good man to look at,
+too, and, they say, first-rate in his family." I had a glance at the
+believer in unbelief, and saw a very presentable-looking person, of
+fine appearance and good features, busily engaged in making the most
+of his time at one of the tables in the refreshment-room. He was the
+observed of all observers, and appeared to like it; and I understood
+from one of the crowd that he had just returned from inspecting some
+mining ventures in which he was concerned; for, if he does not believe
+in the world to come, he is credited with very strong faith in the
+excellencies of the possession of wealth in the world that is. His
+lectures are attended by crowded audiences, but, as an astute American
+observed, "they won't come to much, for, after all, people who do
+not believe anything can never get up a great enthusiasm. It is in
+believing something that the populace has faith."
+
+Once more our eyes were rejoiced with the sight of the lovely plains
+of Las Vegas, wide-spreading fields decked with flowers and dotted with
+flocks, bordered with ranges of softly contoured mountains, the courses
+of the water streams indicated by bright vegetation and by growth of
+trees of many kinds. From Lamy (170 miles) there is a gradual rise to
+Raton, which we reached at 6.30 in the evening. The appearance of the
+region we traverse as the train approaches the Raton Pass presents
+a strong contrast to the desolate country through which we have been
+passing. From Raton the train was drawn by two engines in front and
+shoved by one behind, and even then the pace was not very rapid, for
+the ascent is very sharp. All the more could we enjoy a very glorious
+sunset, as we slowly ascended the mountain. Then darkness came on
+rapidly, and we slid down towards La Junta into the night, and were all
+fast asleep long before we arrived there. In the very early morning,
+on June 15th, some two hours after midnight, we halted for a time at
+Pueblo. At 9 o'clock we had to leave our beloved Pullman and change the
+cars, for we were to take a fresh point of departure, starting from
+the Union Depôt upon the Denver and Rio Grande narrow-gauge railway
+for Denver, 119 miles distant, and making an excursion on the way to
+Manitou, to which we diverged from Colorado Springs: for to go within
+reach of that famous resort and not to see it would have been a great
+outrage on all the rules and regulations established for the observance
+of travellers. Certes narrow-gauge railways need an apology. Their
+_raison d'être_ is, at the best, that they are better than nothing.
+"If you won't have us, you can have nothing else." And in such a
+mountainous region as we were about to visit, the difficulties and
+expense connected with a broad-gauge line would have been enormous,
+if indeed it could be constructed at all. The narrow-gauge carriages,
+with seats to match, with which we were made acquainted for the first
+time, were of course much less commodious and comfortable than those
+we had quitted, but far superior to those on the Indian lines of the
+same gauge, and Indian engineers had been over to take a lesson from
+the Americans for the use of their carriage-builders. Atchison, Topeka,
+and Santa Fé Company and Denver and Rio Grande Company have been at
+daggers drawn and pistols cocked--ay, and fired--and at battles waged,
+in times gone by; and now our friends on the former line were, like
+ourselves, the guests of the latter, which was represented by several
+official gentlemen anxious to do the honours to the Duke. The scenery
+becomes grander and wilder every mile as the special hurries on as
+well as it can over the sinuous line, which is piercing a mountain
+region savage and sterile, and climbing by the sides of ravines and
+creeping upwards in rocky valleys with pine-clad hill-tops and frowning
+cliffs above. The engineer who designed the line is a Scotchman named
+McMurtrie--or at least of recent Scotch origin--and he seems to have a
+special gift for such aspiring work, and a gradient-compelling genius
+not to be baffled by altitudes. We were mounting towards the snows.
+Range upon range of whitened summits and hoary ridges came in view,
+all paying homage to the rugged crown of Pike's Peak, which can be
+seen from points more than 140 miles away. The fleecy cloudland which
+seemed to lie before us, as we looked away from Pueblo, was resolving
+itself into savage alps. And in these passes, which the eye caught for
+a moment, there might be El Dorados still undiscovered, for around us
+were cities springing out of the desert. Here the enchanter's wand is
+the explorer's pick, and no one could say where the precious ore might
+not be awaiting its touch. We were coming to the Land of Promises. The
+conversation of our new friends, among whom were some gentlemen of the
+press, related mostly to mines, and one of them had, as we discovered,
+a very certain investment at the disposal of the Duke, in the form of a
+mining-claim, which was worth, at the lowest computation, twice as much
+as he was willing to take for it. There was no reason to doubt his good
+faith, but it was felt that it was a kind of fortune which ought not to
+pass into the hands of strangers, and should be reserved for the people
+of the country; and I am sure all of the party who had the pleasure of
+the owner's acquaintance hope that he has "made his pile" out of it,
+and has more than realised his expectations.
+
+Colorado Springs, forty-five miles from Pueblo, is nearly 6000 feet
+above the level of the sea. The character of the line to it is best
+described in the fact that the average grade per mile is 44·14, the
+maximum curvature 6°. There are "no Springs" here, but the little town,
+charmingly situated, is a halting-place much frequented in tourist-time
+by travellers, and reputed to be healthful. There are some pleasant
+houses visible from the station, at which we descended to take our
+places in the carriages provided to take us to Manitou Springs, five
+miles away. Mr. Palmer--if General, I beg his pardon--the President of
+the Railroad, had important business to attend to, but he was so well
+represented by Mr. Bell, the Vice-President, that no one regretted his
+absence, and it cannot be said in his case _les absents ont toujours
+tort_. He is reported to have made a very large fortune with much
+ingenuity, and to have business talents which even in this country
+excite admiration. Mr. Bell is an Irish gentleman, a member of the
+medical profession, who has a delightful villa embowered in a garden
+in the environs of Manitou, where the Duke and his friends found a
+charming interior and an Irish-American welcome, and discovered that
+strawberries and cream were almost as good in Colorado as in Covent
+Garden. A quaint, odd place, Manitou--an American Martigny, with
+Pike's Peak rising (14,300 feet above the sea) over it in the clear
+sky, inspiring regret that we could not make the excursion to the
+summit, which is rewarded, we were told, and I can believe, by one of
+the grandest views in the world--the usual service of guides, horses,
+and mules, and _calèches_--a naturalist's store with skins, minerals,
+feathers, and stuffed "objects"--detached wooden houses and villas
+in small plots of garden--a straggling street, and large hotels for
+invalids. But there was the unusual feature of encampments here and
+there by the roadside, and notices forbidding the pitching of tents
+within certain limits which were explained by the fact that the high
+reputation of the waters and air induces people to come from great
+distances for the treatment of consumption, and diseases of throat and
+lungs. Many of them find it cheaper to travel in horse waggons and
+pitch their canvas dwellings when they wish to make a halt, than to
+take up their quarters at hotels. Poor people! what pale, hectic cheeks
+and wasted forms we saw; little groups picnicking by the sides of the
+rivulets along the roads--each with a gnawing care--anxiety about some
+dear one's health in the midst of them. Our driver, an intelligent,
+chatty lad, was full of information, and we had to drive the prescribed
+road by the wells out to the Ute Pass, a mountain-gorge wild enough--a
+small _Tête Noire_--to points to which magniloquent names have been
+given.
+
+It is not for want of what is called puffing that Americans neglect
+the resorts of health of their own country, and in the States far and
+wide the beauties and advantages of Manitou are blazoned forth on the
+walls of hotels and in guide-books to all who can read. I may confess
+now that, notwithstanding the magnificent altitude of Pike's Peak, and
+the eccentric forms of the rocks in the "Garden of the Gods," I was
+disappointed with Manitou. But then the visit was short, and the day
+was hot, and the way was long and dusty, and haply it might be that
+under different circumstances Manitou would deserve much warmer praise.
+It possesses indeed an abundance of curious springs, said to be full
+of health-giving properties; and in the course of our drive we halted
+several times to partake of drinks from various springs, out of one of
+which bubbled up very good soda-water, precisely like Schweppe's best
+in taste and appearance. At the large hotel, which put one in mind of
+the great establishments of the same sort in Switzerland, the water
+served at table to the guests--a sort of pleasant Apollinaris-tasting
+beverage--came from a natural fountain.
+
+The "cataract" nearly made us angry, and there was no regret felt when
+the carriages returned to the hotel, where there was unwonted activity
+and bustle, as the "Denver Zouaves" had just descended in a friendly
+razzia on it, and were desolating the hearts and fireside resources of
+Manitou. The consequences might have been serious, as it turned out,
+to unoffending strangers. Those who needed it turned into the barber's
+shop of the hotel to be shaved, and after some delay a coloured man
+appeared, who began to try his hand on me. Fortunately it was not
+'prentice, for it was very unsteady, and I became a little alarmed
+for my cuticle. "It will be all right, mister," quoth the barber. "I
+never cut any one. But I'm demoralised, dat's a fact, having to wait
+on dem Denver Zouaves. Lor a messy on any enemy dey has! My nerve's
+all gone to pieces wid their wantin' everting at once at the dinner!"
+The hotel seemed far more clean and comfortable than the caravanserais
+in the land of William Tell; but our stay was short, for we were put
+under orders for a sight which has the most inappropriate name that
+could be invented--a valley in which the most extraordinary-looking
+columns carved out in a plateau by the agency of water, have been
+left standing, detached and in groups, to which the visitor enters
+through a cleft in a barrier of rock passing round the base of a pillar
+of sandstone as high as a house. The "Garden of the Gods" contains
+500 acres, and is surrounded by mountains and cliffs. The sandstone
+pillars generally taper from the base upwards to a short distance from
+the tops, which are flattened out or surmounted by slabs or blocks of
+sandstone of fantastic outline, and they are called by names derived
+from fancied likenesses to animals, birds, and men. The juxtaposition
+of the most brilliantly hued, dazzling-red blocks and strata, with
+masses of the same material of milky whiteness, gives the impression
+that the scene is the work of human hands; it seems too quaint and
+artificial for the hand of Nature, to which alone it is due; and the
+vegetation and the trees are in keeping with the character of the
+place. A trysting-place for geologists, and their happy hunting-ground,
+no doubt. But why "the Garden of the Gods," I pray?
+
+From the valley or cup, emerging by another road, the driver took us to
+a ravine-like recess, almost girt in by high wooded mountains, in which
+Mr. (General?) Palmer is erecting a mansion of palatial importance--a
+picturesque site surely--cliffs, forests, and mountain all around, and
+in view one most singular sandstone pillar, named the Major Domo, 120
+feet high and only 30 feet round--a mountain stream brawling through
+tangled brushwood glades--a garden. But the heat! That must prove a
+terror by day to the inmates of Glen Eyrie Lodge or Castle--which, by
+the by, was named, as one of us insisted, from a collection of rubbish
+on a ledge in the face of one of the cliffs, which was, he maintained,
+the nest of an eagle. It was now time to return to our train, and we
+were not sorry to get back to Colorado Springs.
+
+From Colorado Springs to our destination at Denver there were still 75
+miles of rail, and the line continued to ascend till we reached Divide
+(7186 feet), whence there was a gentle descent. There were sixteen
+stations named on the time-table. We stopped at very few of them,
+and travelled somewhat too fast to permit our placid enjoyment of the
+scenery, austere and vast, which indeed deserved more attention than
+could be given to it by passengers in a very lively train--endless
+alps on alps, not sheeted with perpetual white, but rather flecked
+with snowfields, which contrasted finely with the sombre pine-forests,
+and the rich hues of the rocks, touched by the rays of the setting
+sun, that, ere it slid behind the mountains, cast a rose-coloured
+mantle on their summit. The evidences of a bustling city were not
+wanting in the approaches to the capital of Colorado. There were tall
+chimneys vomiting out smoke in the distance, and near at hand trains
+of waggons were toiling over the dusty plain--still 5000 feet above
+the sea-level--fast trotters and people on horseback, beer-gardens,
+factories of all kinds, brick-kilns, and then a fringe of log houses
+and wooden shanties, before the train stopped at the imposing and
+substantial depot.
+
+It was a quarter-past eight, nearly dark, when we reached Denver,
+and glad were we to get into the hall of the Windsor Hotel, which was
+crowded with a mixed multitude--miners, and speculators, and traders,
+and some travellers like ourselves--a very busy scene indeed. In the
+hotel were all human comforts nearly; hot and cold baths, and good
+rooms, and more appliances of civilised existence, for those who could
+pay for them, than could be found in many hostelries of approved
+reputation in venerable towns at home; moreover, exuberant offers
+of help and information. One goes to bed laden with obligations and
+heavy with the sense of favours which can never be repaid. There was
+now a _soupçon_ of frost in the air, and notwithstanding the heat
+which we had endured the greater part of the day, fires were not
+ungrateful; and as we peered out of our windows over the roofs of the
+wide-spread houses of the town, we could see the snow on the lofty
+ranges of hills, watered by the South Platte River and Cherry Creek,
+which surround the cup in which Denver has been built in obedience
+to the impulses of the increasing population, which now numbers, I
+believe, 38,000 souls. There was a bright glare from the gas-lighted
+streets, sounds of music, and a tumult of life in the town which
+would have been creditable to an ancient metropolis. In the morning
+from the hotel windows appeared a beautiful and widespread panorama
+of the hills we had seen the evening before, peak above peak, none
+very densely covered perhaps, or presenting continuous snowfields, but
+extending in billowy sweeps far away to the horizon, all capped with
+snow, now bathed in a flood of fervent sunshine, the snow lighted up
+by the peculiar crimson tints common in Alpine regions. There were
+duties in the way of sight-seeing and exploration of no ordinary
+nature to be done. First there were interviews and receptions, and the
+inevitable drive through the place as soon as the ordeal of breakfast
+was over; and ordeal in some sort it was for the strangers to file
+in to the public room and take their places at their table, aware
+that the morning papers had subjected them to exhaustive criticism,
+which was being verified by those around us. The morning papers too
+had given some topics for reflection, indications that in the newly
+created capital of Colorado desperate men, overtaken by the march of
+law and order, had refused to accept service, and were vindicating
+their rights as wild western outcasts to take or part with life as
+of yore, in reckless encounters and deliberate assassinations. There
+were, perhaps, at that moment some hundreds, if not thousands, out of
+the population of 37,000 or 38,000 of the city, who belonged to the
+adventurous classes--sporting-men, betting-men, ring-men, bar-keepers,
+hell-proprietors, and their satellites, and the scum of the saloons
+attracted from the great cities of the States for hundreds of miles,
+by the prey which miners with belts full of gold, half mad with drink,
+and always fond of excitement, frequently are; and if to these be added
+the dissolute loafers and broken-down mining speculators, the strength
+of the army arrayed against the law may be estimated; and the wonder is
+that among a population armed to the teeth there are not more cases of
+such violent deeds as we were reading of at breakfast. To the stranger
+there was no evidence of the existence of these disturbing elements,
+unless the bearded and booted men with speculation in their eyes,
+in the hotel passages and halls, belonged to the dangerous, as they
+certainly did to the mining, classes. As to the resources of the city,
+although for rapidity of growth its wonders may be eclipsed by those of
+Leadville, Denver claims a very high place in the catalogue of these
+marvellous fungi of civilisation, of which the Western States present
+almost unique examples. There is everything that any one can want to be
+had for money in the place, and much more than most people need. Paris
+fashions and millinery are in vogue. There are fine shops, handsome
+churches, a theatre, breweries, factories, banks, insurance offices.
+
+The principal street exhibits pretty young people, who would have
+no occasion to fear comparison with the _beau monde_ in Eastern
+or European capitals. The thoroughfares are crowded with vehicles,
+and spruce carriages and well turned-out horses may be seen in the
+favourite drive, that has been made over an indifferent road to the
+base of the Rocky Mountains, which appear to be close at hand, though
+they are thirteen miles away. But here and there in the well-dressed
+crowd may be seen a Bohemian _pur sang_, or a miner in his every day
+clothes, bent on a rig out and a good time of it. The streets, unpaved,
+dusty, and rugged, are very wide, and bordered with trees, and the
+houses generally are built of good red brick instead of wood; and
+there are runnels of water like those one sees in Pretoria and other
+Dutch towns in South Africa. The roads about the city leave much to be
+desired; but Rome was not built in a day.
+
+There are many ready-made clothing establishments in the main streets,
+and there is a heavy trade in tinned provisions. Through the Western
+States, as in South Africa, the débris of provision-tins constitutes
+a certain and considerable addition to the objects to be seen in the
+vicinity of every house, and to the mounds of rubbish in the street of
+every village. How indeed could the first-comers in such regions keep
+body and soul together without the supplies in such a portable form
+of the first necessaries of life? Having once run up a town in these
+remote wastes, the inhabitants are still compelled to make a liberal
+use of the same sort of food, and mines of tinned iron gradually
+accumulate around them.
+
+Our first excursion was to the Argo Works, under very pleasant
+auspices, for we had the wife of the Senator, who is one of the
+principal partners, and Mrs. Pearce, whose husband is largely
+interested in the works, taking charge of us. The works are at some
+distance outside the town, but the lofty chimneys vomit out quite
+sufficient vaporous fumes and smoke to blight the vegetation and to
+give the people near at hand a taste of their quality. I am not going
+to give a minute description, for more reasons than one, of what we saw
+at the works; but it was a very interesting exhibition of the processes
+by which the precious metals are extracted from the ores and delivered
+to commerce. The Argo Works simply assay and reduce ores on commission,
+but the business is on a very large scale. Immense piles, in fact small
+mountains, of brown, cinnamon and earth coloured dust and rock were
+heaped up in the sheds, to be brought to the furnaces and turned, when
+divested of the lead, iron, copper, and gold, out in ingots of silver.
+All the methods for the extraction of silver were shown to us, but
+I committed a gross indiscretion when I asked, in my ignorance, "How
+do you extract the gold?" "That," said the urbane gentleman who was
+conducting us over the works, "we never permit strangers to see." So
+there is more there than meets the eye.
+
+The business of assaying here must be profitable, and if the reputation
+of any firm be once established there is a secure fortune for its
+members. The miners flock to them, and they can dictate terms. The
+extent of mining work in the country around may be inferred from the
+numerous offices in connection with it in the city. As a specimen
+of what Messrs. Bush and Tabor of our hotel give their guests for
+dinner, let me offer you this _menu_ of the 5.30 ordinary to-day
+(June 16). Soup, beef à l'Anglaise; fish, boiled trout, anchovy sauce;
+corned beef, leg of mutton, sirloin beef, chickens with giblet sauce,
+fricassee à la Toulouse, veal, kidneys sautés aux croûtons, rice,
+croquettes, baked pork and beans, saddle of antelope, currant jelly,
+lamb, tongue, chicken salad, spiced salmon; innumerable "relishes" and
+vegetables, baked rice pudding, strawberry pie, apricot pie, jelly,
+blancmange, vanilla ice cream, macaroons, pound cake, fruit, Swiss
+cheese, nuts, coffee, &c. The wines were not cheap: champagne 16_s._ a
+bottle, St. Julien 6_s._, Leoville 14_s._, sherry 8_s._, brandy 14_s._
+per bottle. Orders for "drinks" at the bar after dinner were much more
+general than orders for wine at dinner.
+
+Denver, in spite of its mineral wealth, is very poor, however, in
+that of which the want would make life, even in America, intolerable.
+The supply of drinking-water is scanty and bad, and last year there
+was nearly a water famine. The _cartes_ in the hotel announced "Water
+used in this room is boiled and filtered." But great efforts have been
+made to furnish the inhabitants with a store, constant and adequate,
+of the precious fluid, and we saw very considerable works, the
+property of an Irish gentleman, erected before the town attained its
+present dimensions, which were to be supplemented by a new enterprise
+respecting which we heard much. Perhaps no town of equal size in an
+equal length of time has ever had so much money and money's worth
+flowing in and through it as Denver since the Colorado mines were
+worked. It is asserted that the trade of the town for 1881 will exceed
+8,000,000_l._ Colorado in 1879 yielded ores to the value of more than
+3,750,000_l._ The output in the present year will exceed that of 1880.
+In that year $35,417,517 worth of gold and $20,183,889 of silver (more
+than 11,000,000_l._) was deposited in the United States Mint and Assay
+Office. There is, besides, vast wealth in flocks and herds, and Denver
+is the place where the people resort from Colorado for purposes of
+trade and pleasure; altogether an astounding place, with a future quite
+dazzling to think of, unless the mines give in, and even then Colorado
+cannot again be poor; its climate and scenery will always attract
+travellers, and its capacity for feeding sheep and cattle will secure
+its population. "And as to the beetle?" Why, no one would have anything
+to say to it. Nothing was known of it. There might be such things in
+other States. "And the name?" Probably it was a red-coloured bug, and
+got the name Colorado just as the river, or tobacco, was called, from
+the hue of it. At all events the bug did not belong to the State.
+
+The interest which the progress of Colorado and the condition of
+society in the State excite was exemplified by the appearance in
+Denver of a party of Hungarian noblemen, whose names gave occasion
+for stumbling to the journalists who copied them out of the Hotel
+Register--Count Andrassy and others, who were travelling under the
+guidance of Dr. Rudolf Meyer, of Vienna. Although the air of Denver
+is so much bepraised, it happens that most of our party felt rather
+overcome at the end of our excursion through the town and the visit
+to the smelting works, and one of the Hungarians was confined to his
+room. However, they sallied out before dinner, and a gloomy prophet
+of evil remarked, "If these strangers should have a difficulty, I
+consider they'll hev only theirselves to blame. Some citizens don't
+like strangers comin' in and starin' at them, and they're apt to be
+awkward in their tempers in the afternoon." Knowing no danger, and
+fearing none, they went off, and were a long time absent. Meantime we
+were preparing for the road, as we were bound for Leadville, the city
+of the "biggest boom" of mining times--"the Silver El Dorado," as the
+guide-book, with a magnificent "bull," describes it. Our Hungarian
+friends returned to the hotel ere we left. They were filled with
+enthusiasm, and with a good deal also of curiosity in regard to the
+shootings of which they had heard so much, and were following in our
+track next day, and so we parted _sans adieux_. How the love of gold
+has filled these lone valleys with desperate men! "They are a rough
+lot, sure enough," said the landlord, "but lynching keeps them down;
+and it is much better than hanging according to law, to my mind. It
+certainly is cheaper." "How is it cheaper?" "Why," said he, "when a man
+is prosecuted, or when he is tried before the judges, the law expenses
+are heavy, and they fall on the county. When a man is lynched there is
+only the expense of the rope, and a little loss of time for the boys
+who do the job." From Denver to Pueblo and from Pueblo to Leadville
+the line is on the narrow-gauge principle, and our train, which left
+at seven o'clock in the evening, seemed to be driven on no principle at
+all; for, anxious to astonish a Duke perhaps, or Britishers generally,
+the driver did what certainly could not be called his level best to
+send us along up and down a very rough line, and round the sharpest
+curves, at the rate of forty miles an hour, so that when we turned
+in, our rest, if rest at all it were, was exceedingly broken, and
+we trundled about in our berths as if we were in a ship in a pretty
+heavy sea. Still this narrow-gauge was the only line which could be
+made through such a country as we were traversing. Peeps out of the
+window ever and anon revealed, high up amongst the stars, rugged
+mountain-tops, and for ever there came the sound of rushing water,
+near or remote, as the train "bounded" on its course. I do not know
+what stations we passed on our way, but the night was very long, and
+I greeted with pleasure the first gleam of light above the hill-tops.
+The Arkansas River was on our left, and at dawn we had glimpses of
+its turbid stream running madly in deep gorges far below us. At the
+South Arkansas station the train halted soon after daybreak, and then
+we diverged from the main line, and a light train took us over the
+Arkansas River by a fine bridge on its way up the Gunnison Extension
+to visit the highest mountain-pass traversed by a railway in the
+world. South Arkansas station is 217 miles from Denver, and is 6944
+feet--and Marshall Pass (25 miles away), to which we were bound, is
+10,760 feet--above sea-level. There were grades of 211 and curves of
+24° on the way, and the railroad twisted in and out among the ravines
+like an iron Alexandrine, for ever ascending till we had passed the
+limits of forest life. There were stations at short intervals--Poncha
+Springs, Mears, Silver Creek--from each other. From the stations there
+is a good deal of cross-country traffic, and at one place we saw three
+stages laden with men and women--or rather, to be polite and accurate,
+let me say with women and ladies--starting, one with six horses, and
+the other two with four each. These were bound for Gunnison, and as
+we were halting for a little, the Duke and some others got out of the
+train, and sauntered up towards the wooden shanties which formed "the
+town," consisting of the usual array of saloons and drinking places.
+However, our course was cut short by the information vouchsafed by one
+of the officials, that it might be as well not to go up, as there had
+been a big shooting match that morning, and that one man was killed
+and four had been wounded, "and some of them were on the drink yet."
+From 4.30 A.M. to 6.45 A.M. we struggled up towards the pass till
+the line came to an end near the summit, and we were rewarded by some
+very fine views, exceedingly like those of the Mont Cenis Railway or
+the Sömmering. The hills on both sides of the line were stippled and
+flaked with snow, but there was no extensive field, so far as the eye
+could see, nor was there any appearance whatever of a glacier, the tops
+generally being clear of snow, which only lodged in the ravines and
+hollows. Strange it was in these alpine heights to hear the clang of
+Italian tongues; but most of the navvies were from Italy, and if not
+quite so strong as English or Americans, they were in more favour with
+contractors, because they did more work, owing to their steadiness and
+sobriety. The line was being pushed on at an astonishing rate, and one
+man was pointed out to us who had laid four and a half miles of railway
+in one day, "the biggest thing of the kind ever done." Our enjoyment
+of the scenery was very much diminished by our animal appetites,
+stimulated by the sharp mountain air, which craved incessantly for
+food. But not even a cup of coffee was to be had until we got back to
+the South Arkansas station, late in the morning, where an excellent
+breakfast awaited us. Here we were detained some time by a derailment
+of an engine in front.
+
+From South Arkansas station to Leadville (61 miles) the railroad is
+still more aspiring. The higher we ascend the less striking are the
+scenic effects, but the grades are not very severe till we come to
+Malta, where it reaches 130; from Hilliers to Leadville the maximum is
+176, the curves being often 15°. The general character of the country
+may be conceived from these figures, but no words can convey any idea
+of the wholesale destruction of timber which has marked the progress
+of the explorers and prospectors. Where the axe was weary the blaze
+and the fire were called in, and hundreds of miles of forest are laid
+in blackened ruin. At last we are on a level with the hill-tops.
+There, on the hill-tops and in the valleys of a sterile region in
+front of you, amidst those tall chimneys vomiting out smoke and steam,
+is a wilderness of wooden huts, "the Great Carbonate Camp"--where we
+leave the train--spread out over an undulating plateau, broken into
+mound-like hills and sharp hillocks--bustling streets filled with the
+most remarkable swarm of all nations that ever settled on any one spot
+in the world. The story of Leadville reads like a chapter out of some
+book of Oriental fable. It is a huge barrack of wooden houses, with
+some solid and important buildings, with masses of tree-stumps cropping
+up in the centre of the main thoroughfares, pitched over an undulating,
+rugged, dusty ledge. In the midst of blocks of houses sprout up the
+chimneys of furnaces and mining works, the clang of machinery fills
+the air, which is thick with clouds of dust. It was a few years ago an
+utterly wild, lifeless waste amidst the mountains covered with forests,
+when three brothers, named Gallagher, exploring from California, were
+led by some genius, good or bad, to test the material of the rocks in
+the ravine. They struck gold ore, and silver too, and they set up a
+claim; and presently they sold their shares in the land which they had
+appropriated, for 40,000_l._, which they divided. Two used their wealth
+wisely, and made more of it, and, taking to themselves the members of
+the family, throve exceedingly; one, not so wise, if he were quite as
+good, did not prosper as well as his brothers. But the scene of their
+operations was soon swarming with enterprising miners. There was a
+mighty "boom." Now there is a city! Leadville is, I think, the most
+astonishing city on earth, but I am not by any means inclined to say
+that it is a place I should like to be astonished about for more than
+a few hours.
+
+The party drove to the Morning Star, said to be the best mine in
+Leadville; and the Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry Green, and others, went
+down the mine in miners' clothes or cloaks. Two others, whose names I
+shall not give, remained above, and had, I fancy, the best of the time.
+Afterwards we visited Grant's Smelting Works, and then back to the
+Clarence Hotel and dined, strolling out afterwards through the town and
+visiting the billiard saloons, the Grand Central Theatre, and finally,
+where we were told Leadville life was to be seen in all its glory, the
+faro and the kino tables, which, however, were doing but very little
+business, as it was not until after midnight that play in the town
+generally commenced. Instead of sleeping at the hotel, we resolved
+to take refuge in the train, which was drawn up at the siding; and we
+had to drive in order to reach it, as it was considered unsafe to walk
+through the streets in the dark.
+
+We started at four o'clock next morning, June 18th, and on arriving
+at Arkansas Station learned that an engine was off the line in front
+of us. Breakdown gangs were sent for, and all the locomotive talent
+amongst our passengers repaired quickly to the scene. As it was not
+easy to lift the engine, the engineers adopted the expedient of laying
+a temporary rail to turn its flank so as to enable us to pass round
+it, which we did after a delay of about an hour. The Duke got out and
+sat on the cow-catcher by way of a change. But the interest we took in
+the scenery was somewhat diminished by the intelligence that the delay
+caused by the engine would prevent our enjoying the "soda bath" we had
+been promised at Cañon City, and the sight of the State Prison, where
+murderers were to be paraded by the dozen. About twenty miles north
+of the Grand Cañon, the gorges through which the river runs became
+wider and deeper. All that has been written about the Grand Cañon
+utterly fails to convey an adequate idea of its exceeding grandeur
+and wildness. The rocks--closing in so that the spectator in the car,
+looking forward, thinks the progress of the train must be arrested,
+and that it is not possible for it to get out of the _cul de sac_ which
+appears in front, rising aloft for upwards of two thousand five hundred
+feet on each side--are coloured with the brightest hues, and present an
+infinite variety of form. The impetuous current of the Arkansas River,
+contracted at times to the breadth of some twenty or thirty yards,
+and penned into a space in which the waters boil and toss as if about
+to leap on and submerge the passing cars, roars wildly down below on
+our right at a depth varying as the line rises and falls. But it is
+at the Bridge--a triumph of engineering skill--that the horrors of
+the pass culminate. The sides of the ravine approach so near that the
+daring engineer was enabled to execute the idea of lowering from above
+a [**triangle]-shaped frame or trestle of iron; and, the ends catching
+on each side of the gorge, permitted him to work on it for the
+construction of the iron platform over which the train is carried at a
+height of some hundreds of feet right over the maddened river. You can
+look down through the interstices of the girders and glance shudderingly
+at the hell of waters below--a sight and sensation never to be
+forgotten. The ravine gradually expands and the cliffs recede as the
+line strikes eastwards; and though the scenery retains a wild and
+savage character for many miles farther, the impressions of the Grand
+Cañon caused us to regard it with comparative indifference. We heard
+many tales of the great railway war which was waged for the possession
+of the pass, of which traces still remained in the ruins of posts of
+vantage and observation, and the works of the defeated railroad
+visible on the other side of the ravine. At night we reached Pueblo
+and took up our quarters in our own cars, and continued our journey,
+after some delay, towards Kansas City.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of Travel--A
+ Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to New York.
+
+
+_June 19th._--Still on the rolling prairies; in the country of
+compulsory abstinence--the paradise of Sir Wilfred Lawson. At 9.30
+A.M. the train stopped at Newton, 431 miles from Pueblo, and 281 from
+Kansas.
+
+Here a phenomenon--there was a man by the road side who walked with
+unsteady step, whose legs tottered, and who lurched violently as he
+came down the road at that early hour. "He is a sick man," observed
+one of my friends in the train; "that gentleman has been taking
+_medicine_." In the Kansas Act there is a clause enabling physicians,
+in case of need, to order stimulants for the patients without penalty;
+but I am told the doctors have generally refused to act upon that
+permission, so I suppose our friend had been consulting an unlicensed
+practitioner.
+
+It would be ill done, when I am anxious to acknowledge the pleasure
+and profit which I derived from my passage through the State, if I
+did not record the satisfaction with which I perused a volume of the
+"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science," which by accident I
+picked up at one of the stations. The very name speaks trumpet-tongued
+for the progress which has been made in this wild region. The year
+before last, the twelfth annual meeting of the Academy was held in
+Topeka, and I find amongst the list of papers read such subjects
+as these:--The Kansas Lepidoptera; Kansas Minerals; the Mounds of
+Southern Kansas; Recent additions to Kansas Plants; Kansas Botany;
+Kansas Meteorites; Phonetic representations of Indian Language;
+Sinkholes; Elementary Sounds of Language; Mound-builders; On Recent
+Indian Discoveries. And among the lecturers there was Professor B.
+F. Mudge, who died last year, whose name probably is known to a very
+limited number of scientific men outside the University of Kansas.
+Generally the papers contributed by the gentlemen of the State attest
+industry and attainments which make their praise of the Professor
+particularly valuable. It is curious enough to pick up in a railway
+carriage, traversing such a scene of comparative wildness and vast
+uninhabited plains in Western Kansas, an exceedingly interesting
+examination of the Helmholtz theories of sight. The object of the
+lecturer would scarcely be suspected by the reader. We had already
+been struck by the extraordinary absence of signalmen, or of any
+of the complex apparatus of men and machinery which may be seen in
+Europe, and notably in England, to report the progress of trains
+on the lines. Collisions, however, occur in America where these
+precautions are not taken, and the lecturer attributed a good deal of
+these accidents to colour-blindness, which appears to have attracted
+considerable attention in the United States. Surgeons, pilots, &c.,
+are tested for colour, and in the army colour-blindness disqualifies
+the recruit for employment in the signal corps. Altogether the papers
+give an impression that in this new State there are diligent students
+of natural history and physics, and profound inquirers into all the
+phenomena of life. There was a reverse to the medal.
+
+At a station where the train halted beyond Pueblo, a card was handed
+to me by one of the stewards. "The gentleman is, as he seemed very
+pressing, outside; but I told him you were engaged." I started
+as I read the name and address on the card, as well I might. They
+indicated that an old friend whom I had left in a condition of great
+bodily weakness and infirmity in London, was close at hand in this
+remote region--a wonderful if welcome fly in amber. I ran out of the
+drawing-room into the next car, and there saw a man, agitated and
+travel-worn, whom I had never, to the best of my belief, seen in my
+life before. His story was told, if not soon, at least in time to
+let me partly understand the situation ere the train moved off. The
+stranger had been in the service of the gentleman whose card he sent in
+to me, but had left it to better himself in America, and had gone out
+as valet to an American of good position at Colorado Springs. He found,
+however, according to his own account, that he was expected to do
+things not required of a valet in his own country, such as lumbering,
+wood-cutting, and the like, and so he had thrown up his situation
+and was going back to England. He had had quite enough of Colorado
+Springs. "I was not there above a month, and I was shot at twice," he
+said. "Once because I made some remark in a bar-room, where a chap was
+abusing Englishmen; and another time while I was speaking in the street
+to a man a fellow had a grudge against. He fired at him across the
+road, and the ball whistled within a hair's-breadth of my head." He had
+arrived at Pueblo some time before our special, and as the morning was
+warm, he walked into a bar near the platform, while the engine of his
+train was watering, to get a glass of lemonade. As he was drinking it,
+a man walked in and called for a glass of whisky, putting down, at the
+same time, what seemed to be a bank note, on the counter. The boniface
+said, "I haven't got change for this twenty-dollar bill--perhaps this
+gentleman can oblige you." The unsuspecting Briton, who had put the
+money for his passage to Liverpool in a purse, drew it out to change
+the note, and the strange customer at once seized it from his hand,
+and rushed off towards the street with his booty. The Britisher ran
+after him, but checked his wild career when he saw, within an inch of
+his head, the muzzle of a revolver which the robber had drawn, and the
+fellow vanished. "Won't you help me to stop the thief; you see what has
+happened?" exclaimed the victim turning to the barman. "I guess there
+was no money in that purse, sir. And if there was, perhaps you had no
+more right to it than he had." Then the Briton dashed off after Don
+Guzman, shouting "police," and was at once accosted by an officer of
+the Pueblo force. He hurriedly stated the facts. The policeman smiled.
+"I think you won't see that pile agin," he remarked; "and if you
+don't look sharp ye'll miss yer train, that's a fact!" The man had his
+railway ticket all right, a few dollars in his pocket, and I told him
+I would see him and get him a passage, if I found on inquiry his story
+was true. My companions thought the tale suspicious--but I believe it
+was true, and I subsequently franked the man to England.
+
+Now here we had an exemplification of the manners and customs of
+the district. Such an act of violence and robbery might occur in
+London--anywhere. But what of the apathy, or perhaps complicity, of the
+bar man? And if it or they be considered not altogether abnormal, is
+the conduct of the policeman to be accepted as quite consistent with
+the discharge of a policeman's duty? Well, whilst I was pondering on
+these things, there came to me the best possible adviser--a judge in
+this Israel--our excellent Palinurus, Mr. White. He threw a new, if not
+a side light on the subject. "Depend on it he is a confidence man. The
+trains are full of them! Our conductors have express orders about the
+rascals." And he explained that a confidence man is a swindler--very
+often an Englishman, who makes it his business to look out for unwary
+strangers, on whom he imposes with some tale of distress, or some
+recital of imaginary misfortune and adventure. As the man I had seen
+was coming on in the train in our wake, Mr. White promised to talk with
+the conductor, and find out, if he could, the truth about the Pueblo
+robbery. Before dusk a telegram was forwarded by him to me from the
+station where he left us, to say that the conductor had no doubt the
+man was robbed, but that it was partly his own fault, and to warn me to
+be cautious in my dealings with him.
+
+We have now been travelling straight on end for 1160 miles, with only
+two engineers and two firemen and one engine, a feat of endurance
+which has greatly exercised the Duke of Sutherland, who, as a practical
+director of the London and North-Western Railway, has knowledge of such
+matters, and who contrasts the performance with the experience he has
+on the home lines, where engines, engineers, and firemen would have
+been relieved or laid up over and over again. The head engineer of the
+line, who joined us, Mr. Hackney, formerly of Congleton, had become
+accustomed to these journeyings and endurances, which were brought to
+the front in our conversation by the engine-driver appearing at the
+door of the carriage to claim a dollar which he had won from the Duke
+in a bet that he could not do the distance without laying up the engine
+for repairs.
+
+All the long Sabbath-day we travelled on through the prairie, catching
+glimpses now and then of wooden villages, around which trees were
+beginning to sprout up, and of the little churches with knots of carts,
+waggons, horses, and buggies outside, and people waiting for the end
+of the sermon. Now and then, perhaps at intervals of fifteen miles or
+so, are places of larger importance, such as Emporia, a rising city on
+the plains, where many steeples pointed aloft indicated considerable
+diversity of creed. An authority, not always to be relied upon, stated
+that there are fourteen churches belonging to the town.
+
+There was a parting symposium in the second Pullman ere we reached
+Topeka. Mr. White, Major Anderson, General Brown, Mr. Jerome, and
+my much wandering compatriot, a veritable Irish Ulysses, raised the
+tuneful melodies of the "Golden Slipper," the "Little Brown Jug," and
+the other tender psalmodies which had whiled away so many hours, for
+the last time in our society, and the little gages which were but the
+outward and visible signs of the regard we felt for our friends were
+exchanged with honest effusion. There may be--nay, there are--many
+jealousies and causes of estrangement between the people of the Old
+Country and of the New, but between the individuals of both there is a
+_camaraderie_ which cannot, I believe, be found between Englishmen and
+the natives of any country except America.
+
+"Good bye! God bless you! Be sure if ever you come to England you shall
+have a hearty welcome from me." "And from me!" "And me!" "And me!" The
+engine bell tolled, and we moved slowly on.
+
+And we were left all alone! The pleasant companions of so many weeks
+had gone! I wonder if they missed us as much as we missed them?
+
+While travelling across the Rockies and the desert to San Francisco
+and back, our course of life was pretty uniform, and one day followed
+another with almost perfect resemblance in the mode of existence and
+in all things except the scenery and the country through which we
+were passing. First, in the early morning came one of the attendants
+to our bedside with a cup of coffee, and then the curtains of the
+little cubicle were thrown aside and you looked out on either plain,
+or mountain, or river, or col; and on the faces of early risers at
+doors or windows as the train passed through some rising town. At one
+end of the saloon there was a bath-room, and from the tank there was
+always to be obtained sufficient water for the purpose of an early
+dip, which was enjoyed as occasion offered in turn by the party. Then
+a cigarette. Then we dropped in as people do at a country house, into
+the sitting-room, and exchanged ideas as to the progress made during
+the night, and the stoppages, wondered where we were, and had a little
+conversation with the conductor or Arthur as to the place where we
+could stop or get the papers--and so got over the morning till 9
+o'clock, when breakfast was announced, consisting of fish, poultry,
+meat, fruit (I had nearly said flowers, for there was always a bouquet
+on the table), tea, coffee, and cold dishes, with abundance of milk
+and butter. Where the fish came from and how they were kept fresh was
+matter of wonder, for the instances were very rare in which there was
+any indication that it had not quite recently come out of the sea or
+the river. The supply of ice was liberal and unfailing, and whenever
+we stopped at any considerable station the whole disposable strength
+of the attendants in the train was employed in grappling with large
+blocks of it and stowing it away in the ice reservoir, in which were
+the larder and the cellar for such wines as needed cooling, and for
+the vegetables and meat, of which there were great stores constantly
+laid in. Then after breakfast there was reading or sight-seeing,
+investigating the line, examining the maps, receiving visits and
+returning them in other parts of the train, till in the very hot days
+it was necessary, after expelling the flies, which were troublesome on
+occasion, to draw the dust-blinds and the curtains of the carriages,
+to mitigate the fierceness of the sun. It was objected occasionally
+that by this process we deprived ourselves of the opportunity of
+what was called "seeing the country," but after all a glance now
+and then is quite sufficient to reveal the general character of the
+districts through which the train is running; and the most diligent and
+painstaking observer cannot keep his eyes fixed steadily for a day on
+the external aspects of the region through which he is travelling. I
+should be sorry to declare that every one was wide awake all the time
+of the forenoon and up to the period of lunch, which too often exceeded
+on the side of many dishes, being, in fact, a mid-day dinner; but then
+no one was obliged to eat more than he liked, or drink either. Then
+came the longest stretch of the day, and at its close another banquet;
+and as the sun declined and the temperature decreased, we could take
+more pleasure in looking out at the fantastic forms of the vegetation
+which clothed the arid rocks in the desert, or on the bright green
+prairie, or on the towering mountains, waiting till the sun had set,
+generally in a blaze of glory. There were, of course, interruptions and
+variations as we halted at the more important places; disappointments
+about letters which had been telegraphed for and which were expected
+day after day, constituted also a matter of conversation and discourse.
+There was an harmonium in the sitting-room of the palace car, but
+no one had the art of playing it, although we had plenty of music of
+another sort; for after dinner the gentlemen of the railroad party who
+had not dined with us came in, and we were never tired of listening to
+the songs, so original and amusing, which they gave with great spirit
+and admirable time and tune, for it happened they all possessed good
+voices, and the melodies with which the troops of coloured minstrels
+have now rendered the world familiar were then new to us.
+
+During the whole of our tour the weather has been most favourable.
+With the exception of the rainy days in Canada, and the cold and
+rawness which characterised the time of our short visit to Richmond,
+there was nothing worse to complain of than continual sunshine. Now
+and then the temperature was a little too good to be pleasant when we
+were traversing the beds of the dry seas in the desert in Colorado and
+California, but that was something to look back upon with satisfaction,
+because there was no time lost in keeping within doors owing to the
+rain and storm or cold. "Within doors," however, is a phrase scarcely
+applicable to our mode of life, as it would imply that we were in
+stable habitations, whereas, as will have been seen by those who
+have accompanied us so far, we "lived and moved, and had our being"
+in railway carriages; a mode of life rendered so comfortable by all
+appliances, that it was sometimes no relief to be told that we would
+have to pass the night at an hotel.
+
+For nine days and nine nights in succession, on one occasion, we never
+slept out of the carriages or got out of the train except to take a
+stroll about the station, or a peep into the street of a small town
+whilst we were waiting, and one got quite accustomed to that nomad and
+yet civilised mode of existence, where at every halting-place we were
+supplied with the latest intelligence by the local papers, and made
+the recipients of some attention or courtesy, visits and compliments
+(the remarks of the other sort not being many), bouquets of flowers,
+presents of fruit, and plenty of conversation. But that my critics
+might say I dilate too much upon the material enjoyment of life, I
+would describe at length the means which were supplied in the course
+of these long journeys for animal enjoyment. Never could there be found
+more attentive and obliging domestics than the coloured men who waited
+upon us--Arthur and his fellows. There lived in the kitchen compartment
+of the train, at the end of one of the saloons, a coloured cook,
+very intelligent and gossipy, full of quaint conceits and dishes and
+conversation, who commenced life as a slave on a Southern plantation,
+probably adopted for indoor purposes on account of his smartness. He
+liberated himself in the course of the war, and marched off with a
+regiment of Federals in the capacity of cook and body-servant to one
+of the officers, wherein he saw a great amount of very hard fighting
+at very close quarters. This adventurous modern Othello was wont to
+discourse with much animation when he came out for a breath of fresh
+air on the platform and could find anybody to talk to him, although
+he could move no more tender heart than that of Sir Henry Green. The
+gentlemen of the Atchison, &c., Railway, when travelling with us, had
+a _cordon bleu_ in the saloon--an Italian or Frenchman, I think, or
+at all events a French-speaking man, who had served also, and would
+have done credit to an establishment where faults in a _chef_ would
+not lightly be condoned. In the interchange of courtesies, Mr. White
+and his friends invited our party now and then to dine in the saloon,
+which was not "across the way," but up a little, on the line, being the
+saloon in front of us.
+
+But here we are at Kansas City once again! At 5.30 P.M. the train
+arrived at the platform, which was gay with a Sunday crowd, of
+whom many were negresses--black, brown, brindled, and yellow
+_citoyennes_--in much variety of colour and garmenting. Unlike Samson,
+their weakness is in their hair, and like Achilles, they are vulnerable
+about the heels (to the arrows of an æsthetical criticism, which
+accepts the Greek idea of beauty in form); but they seemed to enjoy
+life amazingly, and not to be in need of beaux; perhaps the happiest
+people in the world now that their chattel days are over. It was late
+when we turned into our berths, for it was a lovely night and the
+fire-flies exercised a great attraction over us, but at last the charm
+was worn out and we slept till morning without a break.
+
+_June 20th._--Still the same boundless plain. In vain does one look for
+the grass fields with close, even, carpet-like surface to be seen in
+Europe. We are still passing through exceedingly rich land--the fields
+covered with flocks of sheep and herds of good-looking cattle. There
+are more trees by the stream-side, and shrubs growing in the hollows.
+Habitations are more frequent, and so are fencing and planting. As the
+sun was setting we approached St. Louis. There were some park-like
+glades, and vistas opening up to pleasant mansions, amid grounds
+showing marks of culture. There had been a severe thunderstorm the
+night before, and the St. Louis Station had still traces of its effects
+in pools of mud. But the rain had cooled the air, and the people were
+rejoicing exceedingly in the great improvement that had taken place
+in the weather, for, they told us, men and women had been dropping
+down with the heat a few days ago as though they had been struck by
+musketry.
+
+The appearance of the St. Louis Terminus gave one a high idea of the
+importance of this city. Eight trains were waiting on their respective
+lines to start with passengers to all parts of the Union; and by
+the simple device of placing at the end of each train a large board
+announcing its destination and the time of its departure, much anxiety
+was saved to intending passengers, not to speak of the irritation of
+officials avoided by this simple expedient. The journey was continued
+by the Indianopolis and Vandalia, and by what is called the "Pa'handle"
+line to the Pennsylvania Railroad on to Philadelphia. The train was
+timed on Tuesday so that we were able to see the famous passage over
+the Alleghany Mountains from Conemaugh to Altoona. For nearly eleven
+miles we were carried without steam, and with the brakes on, through
+very fine scenery, down the mountain-side, but the summit was crossed
+in the darkness of a tunnel 1200 yards long. There are some striking
+engineering feats in the way of curves and gradients, and the trace
+of the line is very bold all the way down to Altoona, where the
+Pennsylvania Railroad engine and machinery shops are established--the
+centre of a population of some 17,000 souls, where twenty years ago
+"there were," as a friend said, "only bears, deer, woodpeckers, and
+skallywags." The Duke, Mr. Stephen, and our railway experts got out
+and visited the workshops, and came back very much pleased at the
+discovery of several London and North-Western men in good positions
+in the Pennsylvania Railroad Company's service, who welcomed their
+old directors with effusion, and that there was nothing visible there
+for Crewe to copy, unless perhaps cast-iron wheels. The speed at
+which we travelled was a sensible proof that we were once more on the
+line of our old friends of Pennsylvania. From Altoona to Harrisburg,
+132 miles, we rattled along in two hours and forty-three minutes. On
+another stretch of the line we travelled eighty-three miles in one
+hour and forty-two seconds, including stoppages; and the rapid motion
+was very agreeable, as there was a perceptible increase of temperature
+after we reached the plains and approached the beautiful valley of the
+Susquehannah--a scene of industry, prosperity, and peace. Fortunately
+there was a good light on the river, and we had a fine view of the
+country all the way to Harrisburg under the rays of the setting sun.
+A little farther on we were gratified by the appearance of General
+Roberts at a station on the way, where he was awaiting the Duke to
+congratulate him on his safe return from the Western expedition, and we
+bade him farewell at his own house, with many sincere and well-deserved
+acknowledgments of great and constant kindness. Then over the river by
+the noble bridge, and on to Philadelphia. We did not visit Pittsburg,
+which was vomiting out masses of smoke, nor did we halt this time at
+the capital of the Quaker State.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport--Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our last day in America.
+
+
+The special train was detained by the immense amount of traffic on the
+line, as we approached New York, and we did not reach Brooklyn till a
+little before 11 P.M. on June 21, so that it was past midnight when we
+ascended the steps of the Windsor Hotel, which we had selected by way
+of a change, and found to be every way commendable, with the exception
+of its distance from the busy parts of the city. The following day
+was devoted to letter reading and writing, receiving visitors, and
+various attempts "to go out," which were not generally successful, for
+New York was palpitating with the intense heat. The "heated term" was
+in full vigour, but it was now quite temperate in comparison to the
+excesses which had marked its advent some time before our arrival. In
+the evening we got up strength and courage enough to go to Wallack's
+Theatre, a very pretty, well-constructed house, and saw "The World"
+excellently acted and admirably put on the stage. Next day, June
+23rd, in virtue of a solemn league and covenant with Uncle Sam and
+Mr. Hurlbut, the Duke and I devoted ourselves to fresh fields and
+pastures new, and ordered ourselves accordingly for Coney Island. A
+long bank of sand by the sea-shore has, by an accident, become one of
+the most crowded resorts in the world, and to-day there were races in
+the new ground. It was not, as we found, so easy to get there. Having
+the advantage of two experienced guides, our party of four managed to
+break up into two and to miss each other; one taking the boat at one
+iron pier, and the other embarking by a different mode of conveyance.
+But as we were bound to see Coney Island, the Race course being a
+secondary object, our temporary separation did not prove a source of
+great annoyance.
+
+The early settlers would indeed have been astonished if they could
+look round and see what they have brought the quiet place to in these
+later days. They were Quakers persecuted by the good Christians of New
+England, who were driven out of Boston as ruthlessly as though they
+had been malignants and papists of the worst sort. They settled the
+township of Gravesend about 250 years ago, and amongst the conspicuous
+settlers occurs the title and name of Lady Deborah Moody, of whom this
+deponent knows nothing, but wonders how, with such a title, she managed
+to have influence amongst a Society of Friends.
+
+A ship was built, so the Americans say, of 70 tons in 1699, by the
+descendants of the Quaker settlers, and less than 100 years later
+the bold republicans, abandoning the doctrines of peace, engaged
+and captured an English corvette off the island. It was all along of
+General How, who landed his troops here and set the people to work on
+the fortifications he threw up, whether they would or no. A corvette,
+bound to Halifax, anchored off the island, and an old whaler, who,
+says the chronicler, must have been smarting under the wrongs he had
+suffered at the hands of the red-coats, or who possibly regarded the
+work as he would the capture of a finner or a bottle-nose, imparted
+to a few trusty friends the idea of "cutting her out." So embarking at
+night in a couple of boats, they stole down with muffled oars and ran
+up under the stern of the ship. There was no watch, and through the
+cabin windows the officers could be seen playing cards. The crews of
+the boats boarded the corvette simultaneously, seized, overpowered, and
+bound the officers and men, lowered them into their boats, and, having
+set the man-of-war on fire, pulled over to the Jersey shore with their
+prisoners. It is to be hoped that the demeanour and language of the
+captain have been misrepresented by local tradition; but he is said
+to have cried bitterly, and to have exclaimed, "To be surprised and
+captured by two blooming egg-shells is too blasted bad!"
+
+There was a long period of neglect before Fashion and the populace
+found out the attractions of Coney Island. Fishermen, oyster-catchers,
+and sportsmen visited the sandy beach from time to time; then after
+a while a few houses were run up of a very inferior class, and these
+were frequented by the very worst of the scum of New York, so that it
+was almost dangerous, and certainly disgusting, to go among them, while
+the scenes on the beach, to which the present proceedings afford such
+a contrast, were described as being of the most disgraceful character.
+
+The official directions for spending a day at Coney Island certainly
+indicate a belief in the possession of enormous physical energy and
+indefatigable curiosity on the part of the visitors in those who
+compose the code. Having given you sailing instructions by the iron
+steam boat to Bay Ridge for the Sea Beach Railway (ticket 35 cents),
+you are to visit the Sea View Palace Hotel, the Piazza, the two iron
+piers, the _Camera obscura_ (10 cents), the Great Milking Cow, the
+top of the observatory (15 cents); then to eat a Rhode Island clam
+bake (50 cents), visit the aquarium (10 cents), take a park waggon and
+ride over the Concourse to Brighton; see the hotel grounds and bathing
+pavilion there; then take the Marine Railway (5 cents) to Manhattan
+Beach; visit the Oriental Hotel and take the Marine Railway to Point
+Breeze (10 cents) and return back to Brighton Beach Pavilion and take
+a bath; then see the Museum of Living Wonders (10 cents), dine at the
+Hotel Brighton, hear a concert in the evening, and return to New York
+by 11 o'clock. "This trip," observes the compiler, "may fatigue one,
+but the excitement soon overcomes the trouble." Coney Island is indeed
+an institution.
+
+Along the sea front of the bank for some three or four miles there
+has been constructed an esplanade lined with seats, and defended from
+the sea by a stone wall. Outside there is a belt of shingle on which
+the surf breaks, but not violently, unless in bad weather. Large
+bathing establishments, with every appliance, are placed at convenient
+intervals along the shore. Here in the season tens of thousands of
+people may be seen, all properly and decently attired, disporting in
+the waves. At the time of our visit, the hour and the season of the
+year seemed not to be favourable to the indulgence. We were too late
+in the day. It is an early place, and from 7 till 9 A.M. from the
+month of June to the end of September are described as the orthodox
+periods. Nevertheless the spectacle was quite unique, and if you can
+imagine Brighton with half-a-dozen Pavilions blown out to twice their
+size, and the largest hotels multiplied by ten in length, breadth, and
+depth, you may fancy what the Coney Island front is, provided always
+that you can also conjure up (literally) myriads of well-dressed men,
+women, and children perambulating the esplanade or sitting in the
+grounds around the various establishments which occupy a large space
+inland--pavilions, hotels, exhibitions, restaurants, and club-houses.
+There were fireworks going on in broad day; but these were principally
+for the purpose of exhibiting very ingenious Japanese figures, which
+were discharged from bombs, and which gradually descending were objects
+of eager competition amongst the younger members of the enormous
+multitude. And with all so much good-humour, so much propriety of
+demeanour; none of the brutal rushes of "roughs" which disgust one
+with English popular assemblages--none of the brutal horse-play, and
+screams, and unmeaning cries of the 'Arrys and the Bills of our popular
+resorts.
+
+Looking at Mr. Marshall's excellent book on the United States, which
+we found to be copious and accurate, I was struck by what he says
+respecting a habit of the people which, according to my experience,
+has very much decreased since I was last in the States, but which
+he finds in as full force, and repulsive as ever. I am bound to say
+I think the habit of spitting has very much diminished, but from
+numerous evidences, from the presence of spittoons in every room and
+in the passages of the hotels, and from public admonitions, such as
+one we saw at some of the theatres, that the audience would not spit
+upon the stage, I must believe that it still exists. What the cause
+of this habit may be it is not easy to determine. It cannot be in the
+race, because it is scarcely an "English" habit. I would be inclined
+to attribute it to the drinking of iced water, but ladies in America
+use the national beverage quite as freely as the men, and spitting is a
+masculine failing. Can it be a result of climate? Scarcely. For in the
+States, British-born people do not seem to be affected by the influence
+of the habit in those around them after many years' residence. Smokers
+and non-smokers alike indulge in the practice, so that tobacco cannot
+be charged with the disagreeable custom. I assume that it is as common
+as Mr. Marshall asserts it is, but I am bound to say, according to
+my own observation and experience on my last visit, that there was no
+evidence to show that it was common or national. Chewing tobacco also
+appears to me to have fewer votaries than formerly. A remark to that
+effect at Richmond brought upon me something like a rebuke from the
+gentleman to whom I spoke, a Judge of the land. "No, sir," he said,
+"not at all! I rather think we chew more than ever!" And, to illustrate
+his faith, he produced a silver box, shaped a plug of no doubt very
+excellent weed, and thrust it into his mouth. I do not recollect,
+however, meeting a gentleman in the course of our journey who used
+tobacco in that way, with that exception.
+
+In the grounds in front of the pavilion, where an excellent orchestra
+of some one hundred performers were playing, sat a very large and
+appreciative audience, who applauded with discrimination, and were
+content with the good performance of each piece.
+
+Our common rendezvous was the Surf Club, one of the numerous convivial
+associations for which Coney Island seems to be specially adapted;
+and I presume the name had nothing at all to do with any supposed
+amusements of the members in connection with the surf on the beach
+outside. There was some difficulty in finding our way through a
+labyrinth of rooms all filled with guests: with corridors swarming
+with people; with vast halls, where at hundreds of tables there were
+seated people engaged in the consumption of the _menu_ of a Coney
+Island restaurant, abounding in strange dishes and attended by armies
+of waiters. At a rough guess, I should say there may have been about
+4000 people in the building--and this was but one of several--I think
+the Brighton Beach Hotel, but of this I am not quite sure.
+
+When the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad was opened none
+believed in its success, but the foresight of the projector was
+justified; and when it was found that respectable people would go
+there, if the vagabonds of both sexes and their associates were driven
+away, the police asserted themselves, and swept off the gamblers and
+the others of a still more dangerous class, who were to be found there
+in increasing numbers every year; and then hotels were erected and
+landing-places made for the steamers; and now the electric light blazes
+in a hundred halls, and music and rejoicing sound late into the night,
+contending with the noise of the surf upon the beach. Bowling-alleys,
+shooting-grounds, archery, croquet, sailing and rowing, all invite some
+of the visitors, according to their tastes. An amusing exemplification
+of the ingenuity of American advertisers is afforded by the sailing
+vessels, which display in enormous characters on their main-sails
+the names of quack medicines, from which no corner of this continent
+appears to be safe.
+
+On June 24th the party, which had been somewhat dislocated, reunited
+their scattered forces, and at 2 P.M. started by train after a little
+repose, for Newport, R.I. It was a kind of holiday after our travels,
+but somewhat out of place, for we were told the Ocean House was
+scarcely ready; but we should not have found it out, had we not been
+informed of the fact. The newspapers had been on the alert, and soon
+after the Duke's arrival visitors began to call and invitations to pour
+in--some well-nigh irresistible, for they included opportunities for
+experiences of bass-fishing.
+
+_June 25th._--Newport has not yet put on its festive attire. It is
+not the season, and we ought not to be here. Nevertheless it is still
+so pleasant, and so respectably dull, that one enjoys it amazingly.
+After breakfast we walked down to the seashore and sat gazing on
+vacancy, and on three yellow ladies collecting clams. Returning thence
+in a very hot sun, ran to earth in the hotel where, presently, there
+were many visitors; and how kind and anxious to please they were! Mr.
+Fearing drove up later on the top of a drag, and whirled us away to
+a charming fishing-box on the shore, in order to judge for ourselves
+what bass-fishing was like. It was a very pretty drive, and Mr. Fearing
+handled his "four" as if he were bent on joining the Coaching Club--not
+indiscreetly, as the horses were not accustomed to going together, but
+with satisfactory decision--and we all were landed without mishap by
+the side of the road, close to one of the best-organised sporting-boxes
+I have ever seen, built entirely for the comfort and delectation of
+Mr. Fearing and two or three friends who own the bass-fishing stands,
+at the end of one of which a gentleman was then busily engaged in his
+pastime, for the sea comes rolling up upon the rocks within some forty
+or fifty yards of the sward of the green meadows on which the house
+is placed. From it projects into the breakers a platform supported
+on iron pillars, at the end of which there is an enlargement of the
+structure to enable the fisherman and his attendants to stand at their
+ease--the one in hurling the bait and the other in preparing it. And
+first, as a proof that the labour is not futile, there was exhibited a
+terrible-headed monster with great scales, which had been caught that
+morning by Mr. Whipple--a bass of 57 lbs. weight, of which I think the
+skull and jaws and gills must have weighed a third. The fishing is not,
+as I found, to be done at once, but needs a little practice. The art of
+casting consists in the double operation of jerking the bait from the
+top of a stiff rod, and checking the run of the line without permitting
+it to overrun, which it is very apt to do in an inexperienced hand, by
+a pressure of the thumb on the reel, just sufficient to let the weight
+of the bait carry out the hook to the farthest stretch of the jerk.
+The rod, not more than eight or nine feet long, a work of great art,
+and costly, is furnished with a reel, also very expensive, containing a
+couple of hundred yards of prepared line. At the end is a large single
+hook, sometimes secured to a piece of piano-wire, as the "blue fish"
+will cut through the strongest cord or gut. To this is fixed a junk of
+fat oily fish, of which supplies are kept in a basket close at hand,
+to be cut up for ever and ever by the attendant, and ever and anon
+pieces are chucked into the sea, and being of a very unctuous nature,
+the oil rising to the top, floats away on the surface of the water, and
+attracts the bass within measurable distance of the platform. Captain
+Fearing threw, Mr. Whipple threw, and the gentlemen at the end of
+another pier emulated them, and pounds, perhaps stones, of bait were
+thrown into the sea, but the bass, which are capricious, like most
+fish, were not to be caught; and so after a time we returned to the
+cottage.
+
+I was, unfortunately, unable to accept an invitation from one of the
+many hospitable gentlemen in Newport, to go out and spend the evening
+on a desolate island, where they are said generally to have exceedingly
+good sport, in order to get up before sunrise the following morning
+and essay my skill, or want of it, in bass-fishing. Mr. Wright, an
+enthusiastic sportsman, availed himself of a like invitation with
+great pleasure and with many anticipations of delight, but on Monday
+morning he returned weather-beaten back, and boot-less and bass-less
+home, although he assured me he enjoyed himself very much, and had very
+agreeable company out at sea on the rock.
+
+The following day (June 26th) was cloudy and cool, and all that was
+of rank and fashion in Newport went to All Souls Church. There are
+many churches in Newport, and in the height of the season, each is,
+I am told, well filled on Sundays. And wonderful it is that there is
+neither dissension nor controversy among the congregations. They mingle
+together coming and going, affording to me, who have been accustomed at
+times to observe the manners and customs of my country men and women
+on like occasions in Ireland and elsewhere, ground for wonder, not
+unintermingled with an ardent desire that we, nearer home, could learn
+the secret of this moderation.
+
+Mr. Bridgman, our fellow-passenger in the "_Gallia_," is enjoying his
+_villeggiatura_ with his wife and family in a pretty little cottage.
+We were very much pleased indeed to renew our acquaintance with him,
+although there was no scope for the display of his fine talents as a
+salad-maker. It was not foggy enough for the ladies, who delight in a
+thick and moist _brume_ from the Banks, and who sit at the open windows
+when it comes on for the sake of their complexions, as it is esteemed
+a sovereign cosmetic beyond Maydew or Kalydor. Whether it be rightly
+credited with these virtues or not, I can answer for the presence of
+many fair ladies in church, and on their way to and fro in the streets.
+We dined with Mr. and Mrs. Keene, who reside in one of the best villas
+of the many charming dwellings in Newport.
+
+The victories of the American horses in France and England created
+an enthusiasm in the States almost as intense as though they had been
+won by the national fleets or armies. From one end of the Union to the
+other the news was flashed the same day, and we saw the names of the
+conquerors in large letters in every newspaper. Unfortunately there
+came at the same time reports of foul play to American competitors at
+the hands of some English roughs, and there was a good deal of heat
+caused by the objections taken to the entry of the "Cornell Crew" at
+Henley. These international contests should be very carefully conducted
+and judiciously worked, or they will do more harm than good, if indeed
+they do any good at all. The injurious insinuations respecting the age
+of Foxhall could but excite indignation in the minds of honourable men
+against whom they were directed.
+
+There is a State House in the town, and there is also a mansion
+occupied by Commodore Perry, but the most useful inhabitant of the
+place appears to have been one Abraham Touro, a Jew, who gave his name
+to the park, a cemetery, a synagogue, and a street. Altogether there
+is rather an old-world air and look in the town; but one must go along
+the Avenues to have an idea of the charms which lead so many of the
+principal families of the Eastern States to make the place a resort
+when they are not enjoying the delights of travel in Europe, or that
+blissful existence which endears Paris to our Transatlantic relatives.
+Bellevue Avenue is bordered by a number of very sprightly dwellings,
+of every order and disorder of architecture, and rejoicing in all the
+extraordinary richness and elaboration of American workmanship in wood,
+each standing in a little park of its own, generally rich with trees,
+shrubs, and an ornamental garden. Several of these interiors, as we
+had reason to know, were furnished in the very best taste, and filled
+with objects of art, excellent examples of good masters, principally
+foreign, and articles imported from all the corners of the globe. Of
+an afternoon the ladies might be seen driving, in very well turned-out
+carriages, to some rendezvous where lawn-tennis or a picnic awaited
+them; and altogether, even at this time of year, Newport presented a
+picture of great refinement and comfort, which enable the visitor to
+understand how attractive it must be in the height of the season, and
+why it is Americans are so fond of life in Rhode Island.
+
+I am not in a position to throw the smallest doubt upon the statement
+that the mass of stones in the form of a tower, ivy and moss covered,
+and evidently the work of human hands, was not built by the hardy
+Norsemen hundreds of years before the arrival of Columbus. There are,
+moreover, people who declare that the erection is due to a British
+governor of the colony, when it was more prosperous as a commercial
+resort, though not so fashionable as it is at present. But American
+antiquaries take a great pleasure in propping up the proofs which have
+been adduced of Scandinavian enterprise and discovery on the continent,
+many centuries before Vespuccius, Columbus, and the English navigators
+lived.
+
+We dined on the evening of the 27th at the house of Mr. Shattock,
+a gentleman of New York, who had assembled a party of very pleasant
+people to meet the Duke, and kindly hastened his dinner-hour to suit
+our convenience, as we were obliged to go on board the Fall River boat,
+which called at 9.30 P.M. to take up passengers for the Empire City.
+There was some difficulty about getting cabins or state rooms as they
+are called, but "Uncle Sam," who came from New York to consort with us
+quietly, applied himself diligently to telegraph wires, telephones,
+and the like, and when the great steamer came alongside the wharf
+our dormitories were ready. The night was calm and fine. There was an
+excellent band, quite worthy of being called an orchestra, on board,
+which played to the delight of a large audience till it was bed-time.
+As a "sight" for a foreigner, nothing could be more striking than
+the vast saloon, brilliantly illuminated, with hundreds of people on
+sofas, chairs, and benches, reading or conversing in the intervals
+of the music, and presenting infinite varieties of type and class,
+yet all so orderly and well-behaved; and if you moved quietly through
+the crowd, your ear caught many strange languages interpolating the
+American speech--German, French, Polish, Russian, Italian, and, perhaps
+the natives would say, British. There is some care observed in the
+locking up of cabins, and I believe there are detectives and police on
+board the boats; but it is said they do not look after the morals of
+the passengers, and concern themselves only with vested interests in
+portable property. There was no sea on, and the only motion was caused
+by the beating of the paddles and the throbbing of the engine, and
+early in the morning of the next day we were at our quarters in our
+comfortable hotel in the Fifth Avenue.
+
+_June 29th._--And yet more excursions. Bound by a long-standing
+engagement, a small detachment of our party set out this evening to
+visit Mr. Barlow at his country place, Long Island, which travellers,
+perhaps, have not much occasion to see. The Mayor of New York (Mr.
+Grace) and Mr. O'Gorman were on the steamer which took the Duke, Mr. S.
+Ward, Mr. Hurlbut, and our host down the Sound, and were introduced to
+us by Mr. Barlow. The first-named gentleman I mentioned in one of the
+early pages of this diary in connection with the vigorous efforts to
+purify the civic atmosphere made by him on his accession to office. I
+learn that he has since obtained a large measure of success, and let me
+hope corresponding thanks from his fellow-citizens. Attacks on corrupt
+influences are apt to receive lukewarm support from the politicians.
+The power of the respectable classes, which hold aloof from politics,
+is not large. Mr. Grace had more opposition than help from his own
+countrymen, who have been long nearly omnipotent in New York, and who
+monopolise a large proportion of the civic offices and employment.
+Mr. O'Gorman, one of the traversers with O'Connell in the famous State
+trials, is one of the leading lawyers of New York, and is held in much
+respect by his fellow-citizens. The "old Country" is still dear to him,
+but I seemed to gather from his remarks that he shared in the distrust
+which American lawyers generally expressed respecting the principle of
+the Land Bill then under discussion as far as interference with the law
+of contract--"the very foundation of social life"--was involved. Glen
+Cove is a beautiful place, standing high above the level of the sea,
+and commanding charming views of the sound and of the opposite shore.
+It is surrounded by trees, ornamented by woodland and fine natural
+groves, broken up by ravines, through which trickle streams of water.
+The mansion is furnished with every comfort and luxury, and we had a
+garden to saunter about in the morning, and a genial hostess to talk
+to, and her fair daughter to sing for us, so that it would have pleased
+us well to have made a longer sojourn at Glen Cove. Here we passed two
+very peaceful days, part of Wednesday and Thursday, and in a pleasant
+drive with our host in the early morning had some slight outlook on
+umbrageous Long Island. "_O! si angulus iste!_" It is 115 miles long
+and 14 miles broad, and quite big enough for me! And there be deer
+in the woods and trout in the rivers, and fish in all the creeks,
+and game in the wooded lagoons, and forest, lake, and civilised life,
+and many things to please the eye; and then the comet was so good as
+to display his glories and his tail before Glen Cove. But our time
+of departure from the States was drawing near, and there were still
+things to be done in New York, and many engagements to be kept, ere we
+started on our homeward journey on July 2nd; and at 12.35 on the 30th
+June the Duke and I took the "cars" at a rural station, and reached
+New York at 2.35, in time for a run through Tiffany's and some little
+shopping and visiting. There was a dinner arranged by "Uncle Sam" at
+"Sutherland's" in honour of the famous city restaurant. The house is
+one of a type which has, I believe, disappeared in the "City," where
+once flourished famous establishments such as Williams' Beef Shop
+in the Old Bailey, Dolly's in Paternoster Row, the Billingsgate Fish
+Ordinary, Jacquet's, &c., like it in character. Great New Yorkers do
+not disdain to cross the threshold, within which they find admirable
+fare and excellent wines--the national delights of clam chowder, clam
+soup, soft-shell crabs, and many other Transatlantic delicacies--at
+the far end of Broadway, still holding its own against the fashionable
+restaurants. Of the party who dined there with Chancellor Robertson
+and others in 1861, only "Uncle Sam," Mr. S. Barlow, and I survive; but
+the host, a granitic sort of man, with a kindly Scottish heart warming
+the case inside, seems capable of presiding over his feasts for another
+generation.
+
+_July 1st._--It was difficult to realise the idea that this was our
+last day in America, but the truth was forced on us by the practical
+duties of getting the baggage ready and settling up generally, ending
+with a dinner at the Turf Club, where we met Mr. Keene, of Foxhall
+fame, who had also entertained us at Newport, Mr. Jerome, Mr. Stuart,
+Mr. Travers, and other fathers of the New York sporting world, which
+seems very like our own, and had to drink madeira of all but fabulous
+antiquity and excellence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home.
+
+
+_July 2nd._[B]--Up at 5.30. The Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry, Mr.
+Wright, Edward, all engaged in the transport department, with Mr.
+Trowbridge in observation; incessant activity. The Queen Anne coach
+was in readiness at 7.30, and in half an hour more we were discharged
+at the Inman wharf. There was a great flotilla--five large steamers
+leaving at the same period for Liverpool, and there was the usual
+throng at the landing-places of friends to bid "good-bye" to those who
+were about to cross the Atlantic. The steamer we had selected belonged
+to the Inman line, and whatever there may have been wanting to the eye
+on board, compared to the trimness and paint of the Cunard steamers,
+there was nothing to regret in our accommodation or service. There were
+so many passengers that the dining-saloon, illuminated by the electric
+light--which was also used for the purpose of lighting the engine-room
+and the lamps in the corridors--would not contain them all at the same
+time, and so there were two messes for dinner. Epergnes filled with the
+most beautiful flowers were ranged in order, and a rampant war-steed
+composed of white roses was displayed on the table. I am not about to
+give a log-book, or to trespass on the patience of my readers by an
+account of such an ordinary event as a passage home. The second day
+after we left New York was the anniversary of Independence, July 4th,
+and the day was duly celebrated by the citizens of the United States,
+who constituted the large majority of our fellow-passengers. The "stars
+and stripes" were hoisted at the main, and the cabin was draped with
+British and American flags. But there was no speechifying, and the
+spread-eagle was content with moderate flights; a recitation and a song
+or two, and the fire of champagne corks, being the only indications of
+an extraordinary festivity.
+
+About this time of the year the Atlantic, in the latitudes which
+we traverse, is rather vexed of fogs; and if one be disposed to low
+spirits, I know nothing which weighs upon him more than the sound of
+the fog-horn. But what must it be for the captain, who is perforce
+obliged to go at full speed, or as near to it as he can, with the
+expectation every moment of some startled cry from the bow "Sail right
+ahead!" Nor is it quite out of the running that an iceberg may be
+taking a sail across his course. Fortunately we had no experiences of
+the kind; and as night was falling on the 10th July land was in sight.
+
+The lights of the Fastnet were seen through drifting haze, and about 10
+o'clock at night the "_City of Berlin_" steamed through a rising sea,
+with a strong beam wind, into the roadstead of Roche's Point, burned
+her rockets, and laid-to for the steamer to take the mails, and those
+passengers who had decided to land, on shore.
+
+It was blowing freshly, and rain fell heavily; and as we looked down
+from the lighted decks on the murky water, and made out the tug as
+she paddled up to us, rising and falling on the waves, we were seized
+with reasonable misgivings as to the propriety of leaving our ship and
+taking to such a craft. I am bound to say that our experience more than
+amply justified them.
+
+I am writing these lines with a very faint hope that any amendment
+will be introduced, in consequence of what I say, into the abominable
+service between the American vessels off Roche's Point and Queenstown.
+In fine weather and in daylight it is not of much consequence, perhaps,
+what discomfort one may be exposed to in a short passage to the
+shore; but to affront women and children with the misery which must be
+experienced at night time and in bad weather, in the steamers employed
+in the service, is little short of barbarous, if it be not indeed
+altogether so.
+
+After I had got down upon the deck of the little steamer and surveyed
+the scene around me, I thought that it would have been much wiser to
+have gone on with my friends to Liverpool; but I had some engagements
+in Ireland, and so had the experience I was glad not to share with
+my fellow-passengers, on whom I should have liked the old country
+to have made a favourable impression. There was the great steamer,
+with hundreds of waving hands, and the sound of friendly voices
+bidding us "God speed," a blaze of lights, and almost as steady as
+the solid earth, as the horrible little tug puffed away, and, getting
+from under her lee at once, encountered the swell. If she could have
+ridden over the water below, she certainly could not escape that which
+came down from above; so that we were all pretty wet and cross and
+miserable in the half-hour which elapsed before we reached the shore.
+Fortunately, there were not many passengers who availed themselves
+of the opportunity; but the deck of the steamer was crowded by poor
+people returning to their native country. Accommodation for the
+cabin passengers, except seats on the wet and sloppy decks, there was
+none. There was a little cabin, stuffy and comfortless, and moreover
+occupied by a couple of women who had come out to see friends by way
+of a pleasure excursion, and who were suffering the last extremities
+of sea-sickness. The spray broke over the luggage and passengers;
+it was in such circumstances that the custom-house officers began
+their search. One of them, opening my bag, which was unlocked, found
+a small revolver. It was unloaded, and there was no ammunition for
+it; but, nevertheless, it was seized, for I was "importing arms into
+a proclaimed district without licence." A similar mishap occurred to
+a Spanish officer, who was not quite so easily appeased as I was by
+the assurance that the arm would be given up on proper application
+to the police. His revolver, he insisted, was part of his uniform, a
+necessity of his existence, and the authorities might as well seize
+his epaulettes or spurs. However, my deadly weapon was restored to me
+some days afterwards, after a correspondence with the custom-house,
+and I dare say the Hidalgo was equally fortunate. These were incidents
+to denote that we were in the midst of trouble. There was but a sorry
+welcome for us when we landed at Queenstown. Not a car to be found,
+that I could see; but there were a few porters, and the agent of the
+hotel at the pier; and, commending my luggage to his care, I walked to
+the establishment. It surely cannot be quite an unaccustomed event for
+a steamer to arrive at Queenstown at that time of night! The last train
+for Cork had gone; and it might have been expected that lighted rooms
+and some sort of preparation would have awaited the travellers; for
+every vessel that touches at Queenstown, coming from America, surely
+lands a few people needing rest and refreshment? A demoralised waiter,
+who appeared to think that such a thing had never happened in the
+whole course of his experience, as the inroad of ten or twelve people
+asking for supper and bedrooms, informed us that nothing could be done
+until the gentleman who represented the hotel at the landing-place had
+arrived; and so we sat on the stairs for half an hour, and were then
+shown into a gaunt room, dimly lighted by gas. There was nothing ready.
+The hungry people, by dint of patience and perseverance, eventually
+succeeded about midnight in obtaining some poor substitute for supper
+and scrambled to their beds.
+
+I mention the circumstances in which my fellow-passengers and I were
+landed at Queenstown, that those who are interested in promoting
+the welfare of the port, and in making the route through Ireland
+less thoroughly objectionable, may take steps to obviate the great
+inconvenience to which travellers at present are certainly exposed.
+
+Next morning I reached Mallow. I was but a few hours in the
+"distressful country," but I found that things had gone from bad to
+worse while we were in the States. I heard from my fellow-travellers
+in the train that "Boycotting" had attained such a pitch in the South,
+that all the relations and conditions of social life were exposed
+to peril, if not destruction. And still, with the usual cheerfulness
+of Irish landlords, accustomed, as it were, to these excesses of the
+popular will, my informants talked of hunting, fishing, and shooting;
+and I heard full accounts of the state of the rivers, and of the take
+of fish which had made some of them happy. The County Cork, indeed,
+had nearly a parallel in the "wild West." But what a contrast between
+the state of public feeling, in respect to the outrages which were
+perpetrated in each, in the country we had left, and that to which
+I had returned! In the United States there was no attempt to justify
+the men who were guilty of such deeds. In Ireland it was impossible to
+obtain evidence or to convict the offenders. I am not going to close
+this narrative of our little excursion with a political disquisition,
+indeed I have not the materials for forming any opinion respecting the
+breadth and depth of what may be called the Irish national movement in
+the United States; but there seems to be a general vague impression
+in America that as the British Government was not very wise and
+equitable in its dealings with the people of the thirteen colonies
+in the reign of King George, it is, somehow or other, at the present
+moment, treating with harshness and injustice the whole of the Irish
+race in Ireland. It is impossible not to recognise the fact that the
+head, perhaps the heart, and certainly the purse of this development of
+Irish discontent are in the United States. The arms, the body, and the
+legs are in Ireland. During the whole time of our visit, although we
+visited towns where eminent orators were lecturing upon Irish subjects,
+and where representatives of the League were in session, there was not
+a trace brought home to us of the strong sympathy which undoubtedly
+exists in many American cities with the movement in Ireland. There
+were accounts of the meetings in the newspapers, and now and then a few
+leading articles on the subject; but we might have concluded, from what
+we saw and heard generally, that the Irish question was of far less
+importance to the American people than the religious views of Colonel
+Ingersoll, or the discussions between the railway companies respecting
+their fares. The recital of wrongs, most of which have been long ago
+redressed, still reaches the ear and touches the heart of the American
+public, and if the Irish population had not in many ways provoked or
+excited the antagonism of the native Americans in the towns, and of
+the Teutonic element which exercises such a powerful influence in
+the country, there would be far greater sympathy for the supposed
+oppression of the Sister Island by England. The fact that emigrants
+come from Europe is accepted as a proof that the countries which they
+leave are ill-governed; and Americans, in dealing with the emigration
+question, are apt to forget the existence and nature of the forces
+which induced their own ancestors to seek homes in the New World.
+
+The _New York Times_ declared in an article last June, that there is no
+essential difference between the two divisions of the Irish in America
+and of the Irish in Ireland. The voyage across the Atlantic works no
+transformation in Pat, and he is still as much an Irishman after his
+plunge into an alien civilisation and taking out his papers as when
+he stood on the old sod in Meath or Tipperary. "He cares no more for
+the American eagle than for an owl; but a sprig of shamrock stirs him
+to ecstasy. The name of Washington has no meaning for his ear; but
+that of St. Patrick is a living and potent reality." That statement,
+however, must be taken with qualification. There are to-day 90,000
+acres of land in Minnesota as thoroughly Irish as if they were planted
+in the centre of Connaught. There are Pats and Pats. Many of the most
+wealthy and prosperous merchants, bankers, and landowners whom we met
+in the West were not merely of Irish extraction, but born Irishmen,
+and the extraordinary spectacle of Irish millionaires who knew how to
+keep their money, and to add to it, too, may be seen in San Francisco
+and elsewhere in the West. Many, less fortunate, have high positions
+either in the army, or as politicians, or in the estimation of all
+that is great and good in America--such as Mr. O'Conor--men who have
+held aloof from politics, and who could not be tempted, even by the
+Presidentship, to enter the arena of party strife. One convicted rebel
+of 1840 now occupies a leading place at the American bar. I heard him
+denounce the Land Bill in terms he might have used in denouncing the
+atrocities of the Saxon in his hot days when O'Connell was king. The
+influence which has been acquired in many parts of the Union by the
+Irish immigration and by the descendants of immigrants has naturally
+excited at various times the opposition and indignation of the American
+born, and it has always been more or less opposed by the Teutons of
+different nationalities who occupy such a powerful position in all
+the great States of the West. But "the Native Party" is now either
+dead or sleeping. A very distinguished officer and politician said
+to me that he had at one time been a most eager and ardent adherent
+of the policy of the Native American Party, but that when he saw how
+earnestly and devotedly the Irish had come forward in defence of the
+Union, how brilliantly they had fought, and how recklessly they had
+sacrificed their lives, in 1861, he felt constrained to abandon his
+principles, and to admit their free right to all the privileges of
+American citizenship. I could not, however, but recollect that General
+Richard Taylor, in his most amusing, able, and graphic work on that
+same war, from the Confederate side of the question, bore the strongest
+testimony to the services of the Irish in the army which fought under
+the banner of the Slave States. In New York and in San Francisco
+the Irish element has exercised almost supreme control in municipal
+matters, and it may be said, without offence I hope, that, whether
+it be owing to the opposition they have encountered or to a radical
+deficiency which may be Irish rather than Celtic, their management has
+not conduced to the comfort of the cities or to the pecuniary purity
+of the Executive. In San Francisco there is a strong anti-Irish press
+and much anti-Irish feeling. The 'Argonaut' repudiates the thraldom of
+the Irish associations and factions in the Far West as strenuously as
+the 'Times' and 'Tribune' do in the East. But notwithstanding all that
+may be written and done, it is impossible to resist the influence of
+numbers under a system of suffrage so large as that which exists in
+the greater number of the American States. It was curious to read in
+a Californian paper an appeal to England to suppress Irish agitation.
+"We confidently believe," says the _Argonaut_, "that the wisdom of
+its public men, the healthful condition of its public opinion, and
+the strength of its military power will be sufficient to crush out the
+Land League movement, which is but incipient rebellion. That England
+will deal justly, firmly, and successfully with this effort of united
+ecclesiasticism and Communism is the earnest wish of every intelligent
+and independent mind that believes in free government, the guarantees
+of property, the rights, and the personal liberty of man." However,
+there are American parties, if not statesmen, whose wishes are by no
+means directed to such a consummation, and we must take note of the
+fact.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great courtesy to
+ strangers--Manners and Customs.
+
+ "Westward the course of Empire takes its way;
+ The four first acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day,
+ Time's noblest offspring is the last."
+
+
+The "tar-water Bishop of Cloyne" would have been exceedingly astonished
+could he have seen the first line of his prophecy or averment made to
+do duty as a motto to Mr. Bancroft's History of the United States; but
+surely if the prophecy be not realised, it will be the fault of the
+agencies engaged in working it out--never in the history of mankind,
+as we know it, have such advantages been enjoyed by any nation as have
+been, and are, the appanage of the Americans of European origin in
+the New World. They have leaped into the possession of their heritage
+full armed, like Minerva from the brain of Jove. For them have all
+the champions of human rights died or conquered, and the protagonists
+of human struggles for liberty and light fought. For them Science has
+trimmed her lamp--for them martyrs have died--for them Europe and Asia
+have been in toil and travail for countless generations, and they have
+been guided across the sea to a grand continent where it would seem as
+if Nature had been engaged for myriads of ages to provide for their
+happiness and grandeur--all climes and all products are theirs--the
+bounteous plain, the ore-filled mountain, the treasures of the deep,
+the heaven-made ways by lake and river, and it would be a despair for
+all mankind if they misuse their glorious inheritance, and if all the
+nations of the world see that the pillar of fire in the west was but
+an _ignis fatuus_ dancing before their aching eyes in a Serbonian bog
+of creeds and 'isms, of factions and faiths, all struggling towards
+the gate of the Temple of Mammon. "Philosophers," in all the doubts and
+fears which the condition of the Republic inspires at times, cling with
+confidence to the palladium which is, they think, to be found in the
+system of education based on the free schools of the States. If there
+were not a distinction between knowledge and morality, they would be
+justified; but the Evil One tempted us to eat of the fruit of the tree
+which brought sin into the world, and if Americans are to be trusted
+as authorities, the result of the largest and most liberal system of
+education ever devised is not as happy in practice as it ought to be
+according to theory.
+
+As the central Government extended its sway over the Territories there
+was a uniform system, when assigning land for public objects to railway
+companies, of retaining for the School Fund a portion of the land
+in each Territory, as it was settled and admitted as such, under the
+control of the central Government. In the States Constitutions creating
+Sovereign States, there are provisions inserted, varying very little in
+language and not at all in spirit, which render it compulsory on the
+Legislature of each State to maintain public schools free to all the
+children of the people residing within its borders. Another principle,
+of universal application, provided that all schools under public
+control should be free from sectarian or denominational teaching, in
+the schools or in the books used for educational purposes. With such
+safeguards for the extension of education, it is depressing to find
+that, in certain districts at all events, crime and immorality prevail
+in the United States as extensively as in the benighted kingdoms of the
+Continent of Europe. But the most serious consideration in connection
+with the system of common schools in America, is the fact that serious
+doubts are intruding themselves respecting the success of it. In a
+recent official report it was stated that whereas the children who
+ought to go to school numbered about fourteen and a half millions, the
+average attendance was not more than five millions. But, assuming that
+all the children went to school, there are people who declare that the
+education given under the National system is by no means satisfactory.
+Mr. R. G. White affirms that the system is a failure; and high
+authorities assert that "any comparison between the results obtained
+in the public schools of New York, Cincinnati, and Boston, with those
+of such public grammar schools of England, as Bedford, Manchester, and
+the City of London, is simply ridiculous." The teachers are continually
+shifting, and when the teachers, as they do in this land of liberty,
+go away, the schools are deserted, the constant services of a staff
+cannot be retained unless there is very considerable increase in the
+rate of payment now made to the male and female teachers. None of these
+in any State have, I think, more than about 9_l._ per month. Mr. White
+says that "the mass of the pupils of the public schools are unable to
+read intelligently, to spell correctly, to write legibly, to describe
+the geography of their own country, or do anything that reasonably well
+educated children do with ease; and they cannot write a simple letter,
+they cannot do readily a simple sum in practical arithmetic, they
+cannot tell the meaning of any but the commonest of words they read and
+spell so ill. They can give rules glibly, they can recite from memory,
+they have some dry knowledge of the various ologies and osophies,
+they can, some of them, read a little French or German with very bad
+accent; but, as to all real education, they are as helpless and as
+barren as if they had never crossed the threshold of a schoolhouse."
+It is from American writers that these accusations against the common
+school system are to be gleaned. Some statisticians say that crime and
+pauperism are increasing far more rapidly than population. The charge
+on the State for punishing criminals and keeping paupers last year was
+$20,000,000, or £4,000,000; but it is too much to attribute crime and
+pauperism to the defects of the schools. It might with more reason be
+argued that the teaching of the people in the schools tends to develop
+the looseness and eccentricity of thought, where there is no religious
+teaching, which are exemplified in the uprising of extraordinary sects
+and strange philosophies; for America is the land of spiritualists,
+mesmerism, soothsaying, and mystical congregations. Mr. Hepworth Dixon
+may not be a perfectly unimpeachable authority on the subject of the
+number of spiritualists in America; but there can be no question they
+are to be counted by millions. It is averred that believers in spirits
+generally believe in "special affinities which imply a spiritual
+relation of the sexes higher and holier than that of marriage." It is
+not wonderful then that there should be also a very large number of
+divorces, especially in the New England States. Mr. Nutting says that
+"in the history of nations there has never but thrice occurred such
+a breaking up of the family tie as is now taking place, especially in
+Rhode Island and Connecticut, among the people of New England blood."
+Mormonism, although of American origin and early growth, has been
+mainly successful by the constant importation of ignorant peasants from
+Europe.
+
+There is a want of reverence on the part of children towards their
+parents which is very striking. Americans who have admitted and
+deplored this have sought to account for it by the school system,
+wherein the State usurps the place of the parent, and teaches the young
+idea to mock at any authority but that of the schoolmaster. It would be
+lamentable to have to admit that free education is associated with the
+weakening of parental influence. Theoretically, there is nothing in the
+American system to prevent the teaching of religious and moral duties
+by parents at home; but it would seem as if very little of that kind
+of instruction was given by the busy fathers and anxious mothers of the
+Republic, and that when the day's work is done at school, and some time
+given to the preparation of the studies for the day to follow, there is
+no further teaching.
+
+I do not think the rule "By their fruits shall ye know them" can be
+applied to the public schools, in connection with the prevalence of
+crime, immorality, unbelief, or eccentric religion. But it is certain
+the system has not by any means secured that high level of general
+education, or what education is supposed to bring with it, which its
+friends claim for it in the States. There is reason to believe that
+the standard of morality has not been uniformly high in the political
+world, and that in the public intelligence the judiciary does not
+aspire to an absolute immunity from suspicion. Even in the old settled
+States, legislators from time to time may be found, who, seated among
+the good and wise, excite admiration akin to that which is aroused by
+the spectacle of a fly in amber. It has been observed by travellers
+that whatever affection may exist in families, it does not attain that
+keen sensibility and lasting power which is found in French domestic
+life.
+
+When American newspapers of the greatest influence and circulation
+write invectives against the corruption which prevails in places
+high and low, when writers of great intelligence and known character
+contribute similar articles to periodicals which possess the highest
+position in the literary world of America, a stranger may be permitted
+perhaps to say a few words respecting the impression produced upon
+his mind by what he heard and read on the subject when he was in
+the country, without it being alleged that he attempts to assail
+the principles of free government, or to make invidious charges or
+wholesale accusations against a nation. I know too well the force with
+which Americans could retort if they were so minded, and how they could
+point to the reports of election judges which set forth the prevalence
+of extensive bribery, led to the suspension of writs, and will perhaps
+end in the disfranchisement of some ancient and populous boroughs and
+constituencies in England, and to the speeches of Sir Henry James in
+Parliament, to cast any stone out of my glass house on that score;
+but I do not think it can be established that persons in a position
+at all analogous to that of the members of a State Legislature have
+been purchased wholesale in England, Ireland or Scotland, or that even
+a complete Borough Corporation had been bought up. Now, nothing was
+more common in the Far West than to hear it stated openly that Senator
+So-and-so had bought his place, and that Mr. So-and-so had purchased
+a State Legislative body in order to "get through" some railway or
+other scheme. That was accepted in fact as a matter of course, and
+not contradicted or questioned by any one. We heard from time to time
+of the sums which So-and-so would expend to buy his senatorship, and
+of the money actually paid to secure the passage of a line from the
+legislature of O---- and the like, whilst stories relating to the
+purchase of judges were common in the conversation of the hotels and
+cars.
+
+I do not aver that these stories were true. I only know that they
+passed current and were not challenged by those who were around us.
+"Thoughtful persons," who exist in the United States as well as in
+the vicinity of Pall Mall clubs, lament, deplore and hate the evils
+of growing corruption with all the fervour of honest and powerless
+natures. The mechanism is scarcely concealed. It stands before the
+world with less attempt at disguise than the gallows in the gaol. Mr.
+Parton, in the 'North American Review' of this July, writing on the
+power of public plunder, says: "At present, in the ninety-fifth year
+of the Constitution, we are face to face with a state of politics of
+extreme simplicity, of which money is the motive, the means and the
+end. What was the last Presidential election but a contest of purses?
+The longest purse carried the day, and it carried the day because it
+was the longest. Some innocent readers perhaps have wondered why the
+famous orators who swayed vast multitudes day after day and night after
+night, have not been recognised in the distribution of office. They
+were paid in cash from ten dollars a night to a thousand dollars a
+week." And then he goes on to describe the business in detail, and to
+show what this power is. He says: "There is a boss in the city of New
+York who will take a contract for putting a gentleman into Congress.
+Pay him so much and you may go to sleep, wake up and find yourself
+member elect. A boss is a man who can get to the polls on election
+days masses of voters who care little or nothing for the issues of the
+campaign and know of them still less. They operate upon the strangers
+in the land who are unable to use its language and are unacquainted
+with its politics." Mr. Parton describes with humour one of these
+"bosses," an improvement on the pugilists and cormorant thieves of a
+remote period. "The Emerald Isle gave him birth; the streets of New
+York, education. To see the brawny, good-tempered Irishman walking
+abroad in his district when politics are active is to get an idea
+of how the chief of a clan strode his native heath when a marauding
+expedition was on foot. He lives in a handsome house, and has more
+property than any man has ever been able to get by legitimate service
+to the United States. He treats his dependants and retainers nobly, but
+as the agent and organiser of spoliation he is a prey to every minor
+scoundrel, for at certain seasons he dare not say no to any living
+creature. And yet it requires tact, self-possession and resource to
+move about among needy people with a pocket full of money, an embodied
+"yes," and have some of it left after the election. The strikers, as
+they are called, go for solid cash now instead of target companies and
+clambakes for which the candidates paid the bills." "Money, money,"
+exclaims Mr. Parton, "everywhere in politics, in prodigal abundance,
+money, except where it could secure and reward good service for the
+public, hecatombs for the wolves, precarious bones for the watchdogs."
+The details in the article are precise, and if they are to be trusted
+it may be doubted whether the claims of the United States to possess
+a cheap government can be maintained, for it is not cheap to pay
+responsible executive officers a precarious pittance per annum if
+now and then it costs a million dollars to change them. Mr. Secretary
+Blaine has thrice declared that the election in October 1880 in the
+State of Maine, a model New England State, was carried by money. His
+opponents declared that he and his party were as bad, and that they
+too flooded the towns with money. What renders the situation more
+dangerous is the fact that the men who provide the money for running
+these enormously expensive political combinations are either seekers
+after, or holders of, office, and the inference is that they seek to
+control Government, or, as Mr. Parton puts it, that "the Government
+is coming to be rather an appendage to a circle of wealthy operators
+than a restraint upon them." That is indeed a serious proposition, and
+the result of observation goes to support the idea that it is valid.
+The small man is in office, but the big man, his master, is outside.
+The mischief is brought prominently forward in connection with the
+sale of public lands in the North-West, which have been claimed as the
+heritage of the people, and indeed of all the nations of the world. The
+government land attracted the hardy labour of all countries, covering
+the western west with thriving towns and populous counties. But now
+the prairies are skinned by rich men, by "land-grabbers," people who
+buy up tracts of twenty thousand or thirty thousand acres wherever
+they can lay their hands upon them, evading the law and filling the
+western world with roving labourers who work on these prodigious farms
+in summer and starve in winter. This is, we are told, the result of
+"government by lobby."
+
+Occasionally there is an exceeding great and bitter cry over all this
+from the depths of the body politic. Some great paper in a moment of
+deep mental agony publishes an article like that, to which I have
+called attention, by Mr. Parton; occasionally some preacher, nobly
+daring, thinks it necessary to direct attention, from his pulpit, to
+the progress of corruption. Dr. Talmage delivered a very remarkable
+discourse whilst I was in America on the text from Job. xv. 34: "Fire
+shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." Although I do not profess
+exactly to understand to what particular sect he belongs, he is one of
+the leaders of religious thought, dividing with Beecher and others the
+popular favour in the Empire City. The State buildings at Albany ought
+to be heavily insured if the reverend gentleman's vaticinations are
+right. It was an American discourse. I cannot give the whole oration.
+The people of the Brooklyn Tabernacle were presented with a muster-roll
+of the people who had distinguished themselves amongst the great ones
+of the world. Cobden, Brougham, O'Connell and Rowland Hill were placed
+in juxtaposition as leaders on our side of the water. Of course it was
+impossible to resist the allusion to Francis Bacon and to Macclesfield;
+but it was scarcely correct to say that the Lord Chancellor
+Whiteberry--I presume a misprint for Westbury--"perished," nor do I
+quite understand what the preacher meant by the awful tragedy of the
+_Credit Mobilier_. Washington, Ben Butler, and John McClean were linked
+together for the benefit of Americans. They were, Dr. Talmage declared,
+great politicians, but "out of politics there has come one monstrous
+sin, potent and pestiferous, its two hands rotten with leprosy,
+its right hand deep in its breeches pocket. This is bribery." Dr.
+Talmage called upon the American people to judge the crime. "Under the
+temptation of this sin," he exclaimed, "Benedict Arnold sold the fort
+in the Highlands for thirty-one thousand three hundred and seventy-five
+dollars; Gorgy betrayed Hungary, Ahitophel forsook David, Judas killed
+Christ. I think," he says, "when I see the strong men who have gone
+down, of the Red Dragon in Revelation, having seven heads and ten
+horns, and seven crowns upon its head, drawing the third part of the
+stars of heaven after it." And therefore he proceeds to preach against
+bribery. He thought it was the right time, "because the Legislature
+in New York is busy in investigating charges of bribery. The whole
+country woke up in holy horror at the charge that two thousand dollars
+had been offered to influence a vote in the Legislature, as if this
+was something new; as though in one State nine hundred and seventy-five
+thousand dollars had not been paid a legislator of the State Government
+by a railway company to get its charter and secure a dedication of
+public lands; as though three-quarters of the legislators of the United
+States had not, through bribery, gone into putrefaction whose stench
+reached heaven. After a few weeks' hunting the squirrel has stolen the
+hickory nut. Gentlemen in New York hunt out wrong by day and play poker
+and old sledge at night at Delavan House. It was like the country which
+had spent six millions of dollars in lawsuits about William Tweed going
+suddenly into hysterics when it found out that he had stolen a box of
+steel pens. California is submerged in the grip of a great monopoly; in
+Kansas United States senators had been involved in charges of bribery;
+in Connecticut an election to Congress was bought as men might buy
+a box of strawberries. Last year they were convicted of attempting
+bribery in Pennsylvania, but the Court of Pardons liberated them with
+the exception of two judges, who were told that they would be cut off
+from political preferment for their obstinacy. A Pennsylvania United
+States senator used to put a price on legislators just as a Kentuckian
+puts a price on his horse." But it was not legislators alone that Dr.
+Talmage attacked. He declared that the railways, the common carriers
+of the country, were tainted by a favouritism which was, in fact,
+the result of bribery. One company made rebates in its fares to some
+favoured corporation, as in the case of a petroleum company, which
+was enabled to control the price of that light all over the world in
+consequence of a virtual monopoly that was given to it by arrangement
+with the railway. In the same way merchandise in grain, provisions,
+and cattle are placed in the hands of a few firms. "How much," asks
+Dr. Talmage, "did it cost the Elevated Railroad to keep the fare from
+dropping to five cents from ten cents? I have been told," said he,
+"three hundred thousand dollars," which is 60,000_l._ "Very seldom
+does a bill pass through any of our Legislatures if there be no money
+in it. Sometimes the bribery is in bank bills, sometimes in railroad
+passes, sometimes in political preferment, sometimes by the monopolies
+given to the legislators, what are called points, a corner, a flier, a
+cover, washing the street, salting down, ten up! If you want to know
+what these are, ask the bribed members at Albany and Harrisburg."
+Then he goes on, with some truth, to declare that the bribery begins
+far away behind all this; that it is really with the money subscribed
+for election expenses that the evil begins its course. "From the big
+reservoirs of subscribed election expenses the little rills roll down
+in ten thousand directions, and by the time the great gubernatorial,
+congressional, and presidential elections are over, the land is drunk
+with bribery." Perhaps it is quite as well that it is from an American
+orator and from an American writer such statements and such indictments
+proceed, rather than from a stranger like myself; but it is very clear
+that the evil which De Tocqueville indicated long ago has spread rather
+than diminished, and there is reason to think that it will do so until
+the public conscience of a great people is aroused to a sense of the
+enormity of the mischief. But it lies far down towards the base of
+the national institutions, and any attempt to extirpate it will fail
+until the doctrines of the "Spoils to the Victors" be rejected from the
+political catechism, and the interests of party made the means and not
+the end of political life.
+
+The letters which appeared in the _Morning Post_, written under
+the influence of the surprise and anger I felt at the extent and
+impunity of crimes of violence and the state of feeling, or want of
+it, respecting them in the West, were badly received in America, and
+were severely handled by a few papers, as I was informed; I expected
+that the mention of the subject would not prove agreeable, though
+I guarded myself most sedulously from a single offensive word--nay,
+went out of my way to palliate the offences against life and living,
+and to excuse the people who allowed them, whilst I most carefully
+drew the line--a broad one--between these border ruffians and the
+law-abiding, virtuous people of the settled States. I was not, however,
+prepared for misrepresentation. One would have thought that I accused
+the kind hosts who had received us--our generous entertainers in
+so many cities--the courteous, polished gentlemen who accompanied
+us--of murder and robbery, and ascribed to them the brutal murders
+committed by Canty or the Kid. As I quoted chapter and verse, and as
+the papers which vilified me could not deny the statements, they wrote
+that I had been imposed upon by the vivid fancy--in other phrase,
+the deliberate lying--of their brother editors in the West. One organ
+had the effrontery to declare that the Duke of Sutherland expressed
+his delight at the kind and courteous treatment of the ruffians I
+denounced; adding, "somebody lied--it was not the Duke." No. It was not
+indeed! A friend sent me one of these, and below an article in which it
+was said that I might take my place "beside Basil Hall, Mrs. Trollope,
+and Dickens for libelling the people of the United States," and that
+my stories were all inventions, there was a pregnant commentary as
+follows:--"Sunday, July 17th: Daring Train Robbery; Bandits Boarding
+Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Cars; The Conductor and a Passenger
+Shot Dead, and the Safe in the Express Car Robbed; the Passengers Saved
+by a Brakeman."
+
+I hope it will not be imagined that I have any desire to cast obloquy
+on the grand efforts, supremely successful as they have been, to
+turn the prairie and the desert to the uses of civilised man and
+of the world, and to open up the Western Continent to humanity and
+civilisation. I am too sensible of the courtesy, ready service, and
+hospitality everywhere accorded to the party of English travellers
+of which I was one, to write one word which I thought calculated to
+give pain or offence to any of our many friends or to any right-minded
+American. _Maculæ solis!_ 'Tis a pity they are there! In a few years,
+perhaps, the memory that such things were will have passed away like
+the recollection of some evil dream. But public sentiment must make
+itself felt, and above all there must be some abatement of the maudlin
+sympathy, which is virtually on the side of crime, if it be active in
+averting punishment.
+
+Crime in America, especially in the Eastern States, is very much
+the same as it is in other countries, but in the far West there is
+more recklessness in dealing with human life, which, in spite of the
+Howard Society and of humanitarians, I believe to be connected with
+the indulgence extended under State laws by American judges and juries
+to criminals who appear to be deserving of nothing but the strict
+and unmitigated application of the rope. "Property" is safe, for the
+citizens hunt down with extraordinary energy marauders whose object is
+simply plunder. Ordinary robbers and gangs of burglars are speedily
+and summarily suppressed. It is otherwise with those who assail life
+and limb. The desperadoes who infest the "saloons," as they are called,
+with which every western settlement is sure to be provided as soon as
+the shingle roofs are placed on the earliest upheaval of deal planks
+which can be called a dwelling, have far greater immunity and freedom
+than burglars or robbers. Wherever the train stopped for water on
+our journey in New Mexico, Western Colorado, or Eastern California, a
+rectangular wooden box, with a verandah, open doors, windows screened
+by a muslin curtain, perhaps a flagstaff with the Stars and Stripes
+flying, a large signboard, and some high-sounding name--the "Grand
+Alliance," "Union League," "El Dorado," "Harmonium," "Arcadia," or
+the like--was visible, with the usual group of booted and bearded
+miners, and their horses hitched up at the door-posts in front; inside
+you would be certain to find men of the same class at a bar, behind
+which, known for miles around, the affable Charlie, Bill, or Bob was
+dispensing drinks and mixing cocktails, slings, and the other drinks,
+in which the badness of the spirit is artfully disguised by a stimulant
+of a more active character and more pronounced flavour, known as
+"bitters," and kept in subjugation by the liberal use of ice. For even
+in these burning regions ice is stored up as the one thing needful. The
+rudest miner is accustomed to it; iced drinks are consumed by classes
+in America far below the social level of those who never taste them in
+this country.
+
+As the train was halting at Colorado Springs the stewards engaged
+in an animated discussion respecting a certain erection of poles and
+rafters just visible in an adjacent field. "I tell you dat's it." "I
+say tidn't." They were discussing the probability of the scaffolding
+being the gallows whereon "Canty, the Buena Vista murderer," was to be
+hanged the day after. On April 29th, last year, Mr. Canty was standing
+on the platform in front of Lake-house with "Johnny the Ham," "Curly
+Frank," and "Off Wheeler," when Thomas Perkins appeared in an alley
+opposite, endeavouring "to induce 'Dutch Bill' to go with him to the
+office of Justice Casey, who had deputised him for the purpose." Canty
+and his companions at once ran across and demanded his release. Before
+Perkins could answer, Canty fired and missed him. The second shot
+wounded Perkins in the arm; the latter drew his pistol, but before he
+could use it Canty fired; the ball shattered the constable's hand. "For
+God's sake," he exclaimed, "is there no policeman to help me?" He fell,
+and Canty, walking close to his side, coolly sent a bullet through
+his body. He was arrested, tried, and convicted. His counsel applied
+to the Supreme Court for a _supersedeas_, but the court, after solemn
+argument, refused the application. Then they applied to the Governor
+of the State, but Mr. Pitkin, though "a weak-kneed man," would neither
+grant a reprieve nor a commutation to imprisonment for life. There
+was, he said, no ground "to set aside a verdict of a competent jury
+and the district judge reviewed and approved of by the Supreme Court."
+In the very last hour a woman came forward, and the Denver paper gave
+_verbatim et literatim_ the text of the document in which ... "with dew
+regard," she offered Sheriff Spangler $50,000 (10,000_l._) to save the
+life of W. H. Canty, her cousin, whose real name was, she said, N. H.
+Salisbury. "I entreat you to have him spared till you have an interview
+with me." She added that "Jennings and his brother in Leadville would
+pay a still larger sum. You may have ample means for life," &c. A
+gentleman of the press, who came into our train at South Arkansas,
+was present at the execution. Just before the drop fell, Canty, who
+had expressed complete confidence in his ultimate liberation till the
+day before his execution, spoke for fifteen minutes, protesting his
+innocence. Then he exclaimed, "Good-bye, nothing can save me. I have
+faith in the Saviour and a hereafter." The trap was sprung, but to the
+horror of every one, the rope broke at the beam. The murderer's neck,
+however, was dislocated, and "a happy relief was experienced" when
+it was found he had died a painless death. As he was the nephew of an
+eminent statesman it was expected his friends would take action as to
+the disposal of his remains, which were put "in a neat casket at the
+sheriff's expense." In the journal there was a woodcut of the murderer.
+"Before his likeness could be taken holes were bored in the door and
+Canty was lashed to it, and then, when the door was set upright, the
+photographer watched a favourable opportunity when the head and eyes
+were quiet and secured the impression" from which the engraving was
+made. He was not so fortunate as Frank Gilbert, who was sentenced to
+be hanged the following day for a brutal murder, but respited, "in
+order that the proceedings may be reviewed by the highest judicial
+tribunal," by Governor Pitkin at the last moment, "till July 29," the
+day on which Rosencrantz is now sentenced to be hanged. The sheriff,
+Judge Ward, the clerk of the court, and the prosecuting attorney
+joined with others in petitions to the governor on the ground that
+the Supreme Court judges had refused a _supersedeas_ in consequence of
+the defects and informalities of the record of the proceedings in the
+court below. Rosencrantz was respited, and the public, who had been
+expecting a double execution on the 18th of June, were disappointed,
+although they were allowed to slake their curiosity by the sight of the
+condemned men and by testing the ropes in the prison enclosure where
+the scaffold was ready. In the paper which gave the text of Governor
+Pitkin's reprieve there was a heading "Done Brown. Al. Huggins,
+marshal of Recene, turns out a bad man. He shoots and fatally wounds
+officer Brown of Kokomo." Phil. Foote, constable of Kokomo, formerly
+marshal of Robinson, and Al. Huggins, marshal of Recene, it seems had
+spent the night in visiting the saloons of Kokomo, and in the early
+morning began to fire their pistols and guns off in the street, and
+continued to do so until Andy Sutton, marshal of Kokomo, attempted to
+arrest them, but failed, "as he was quickly covered by two rifles."
+Mr. Brown, a police officer, asked Huggins to put up his pistol, and,
+to encourage him, proceeded to pocket his own revolver, when Huggins
+took deliberate aim with a 38-calibre Colt and shot Brown in the left
+breast, just above the heart. Huggins and Foote started for Recene.
+The marshal of Kokomo followed quickly in pursuit, with a large body
+of men. Huggins refused to surrender, whereupon the marshal shot him
+in the face. As there was a movement to lynch him, Al. Huggins was
+sent under strong guard to Leadville, but Foote escaped. "Brown was
+not dead by last accounts, but was not expected to live long." Then
+came a long account of another "Denver tragedy. Charles Stickney
+murders Mr. T. Campan and Mrs. H. O. Devereux in a boarding-house."
+Stickney was nephew of ex-Governor Clifford, of Rhode Island, served as
+lieutenant, 20th Regiment, in the war of 1861-4, graduated at Harvard,
+became principal of a school, married a lady whom he sent to London
+to study music, and tried mining whilst his wife was giving music
+lessons in Denver. There she met Mr. Campan, one of the best families
+in Detroit; Stickney shot him and killed a woman who was in the room
+at the same time. "Public opinion is in favour of Stickney, and he will
+probably be reprimanded." The evening of the day we reached Leadville,
+"Alderman Johnnie M'Combe, a leading candidate for lieutenant-governor
+and mayor, and last spring before the people for city treasurer,"
+shot and wounded, probably fatally, a well-known actor named James
+M'Donald, because the latter had taken some children in M'Combe's
+buggy for a drive. It is not easy to determine how far Johnnie's chance
+of office may be affected by this ebullition, but the newspapers did
+not write of it with harshness; one gave it a comic character by the
+heading, "Ex-Alderman M'Combe attempts to perforate Jemmy M'Donald's
+cranium." In my morning paper of the same date I find that "James Hogan
+was foully murdered by James M'Cue in the open streets of Erie this
+afternoon in a quarrel about a handkerchief;" that Dr. Flemings, a
+prominent citizen of Portland, Ashley County, Arkansas, had appeased
+a quarrel between a pedlar named Gillmore and a coloured man very
+effectually, for, "incensed by a remark made by the pedlar, the doctor
+drew a pistol and shot him dead;" that "a prominent business man of
+M'Leansboro' had made a sensation on the streets to-day by hunting
+up, pistol in hand, one of the gay Lotharios of Hamilton County;"
+that "Daniel Keller, deputy county clerk, was stabbed and killed in
+the street of Virginia City by Dennis Hennessy, a kerbstone broker;"
+that "a searching party under Captain Leper had overhauled Hamilton,
+Myers and Brown, the outlaws who shot Sheriff Davis and Collector
+Hatter at Poplar Bluff, Mo.; killed Hamilton, mortally wounded Myers,
+and made Brown a prisoner;" that "James Hurd shot Jeff Anderson at
+Alamosa, Col., and that it was feared the latter would not survive."
+An account of the death of "Curly Bill," a notorious desperado, leader
+of cowboys and murderer of Marshal White, who was killed at Caleyville,
+Arizona, by his comrade, Jem Wallace, followed. They had a quarrel (of
+course, in a saloon). After a few drinks "Curly Bill" said, "I guess
+I will kill you on general principles." Wallace stepped out of the
+saloon and immediately opened fire, inflicting a mortal wound on his
+foe. After a brief hearing Wallace was discharged, and left for parts
+unknown. Then it was related how "Thomas Clarey ('Tommy the Kid'), a
+Durango outlaw, was killed by a comrade named Eskridge at Annego while
+drunk." A fratricide and three trials for murder were duly recorded.
+Another paper gave an account of South-West Colorado from the lips
+of a recent visitor to San Juan County. "Are you going back to San
+Juan? No, I think not; but it is a glorious country. The men there
+are a little rough, and kill each other on slight provocation; but a
+peaceable man who does not swagger and blow is not molested. There is
+no law, and courts and constables are unknown." He narrates how Aleck
+----, acting as a barkeeper, "a noble-hearted, jovial fellow, full of
+fun, who looked you square in the eye, owns mines, said to be worth
+a million," settled a difficulty; I am inclined to think Mr. Charles
+Klunk rather drew on the interviewing reporter of the _Globe Democrat_.
+He was, he said, going to see a stockman who lived about fifty miles
+from the house where he was visiting. A farmer said to him "Come and
+take a drink with me, and I'll show you the barkeeper who killed the
+man you are going to see an hour ago." The stockman had come into
+the saloon whilst Aleck was in the back room, and began to abuse him.
+Aleck heard him, opened on the man with a revolver, and "shot him full
+of holes. Next day I asked him what he was going to do about it, and
+he said he had been tried and acquitted, which meant that some of the
+leading men had told him that he had done right. There was no trial
+about it. When a man kills another out there in a fight they don't
+inquire very strictly into the circumstances, but make up their minds
+that they can't bring the dead man to life by hanging the killer, so
+nothing is done about it. But when a man murders another to rob him,
+the vigilants turn out and have no mercy on him. They just fill his
+skin with lead and tumble him into a hole like a wolf. After all,
+though the bears are plentiful in the spring, you can kill a deer 100
+yards from the house where you like, the streams are alive with trout,
+the vegetables and crops splendid." Mr. Charles Klunk's resolution not
+to go back to this Happy Valley seems founded on sound constitutional
+principles. What I wish to point out is the condition in which the
+Central Government and State Governments have permitted many districts
+of New Mexico, Colorado, and California to remain. It is plain that
+the peculiar conditions under which the sway of the United States has
+been extended over the regions of the Far West have rendered it very
+difficult to establish the machinery for protecting life and property
+and punishing crime; but I do not see that the statesmen at Washington
+or the legislators at the State capitals are very much concerned at
+the reign of terror which prevails on the borders, or that they seek
+to impress on their people any regard for the sacredness of life. In
+fact, human life is almost a drug in the market. And I write fully
+sensible of the failures of our own and of all European Governments to
+repress crime, to prevent violence, and to ensure security to life and
+property. I am aware that Ireland and Poland are to the fore, and that
+wife-beating and "running kicks" illustrate the brutality of Lancashire
+and other districts--that London has its Alsatias, that every European
+capital has foul recesses in which the only laws are those of crime.
+All the world is busy preparing shoals of emigrants for the United
+States. It is only, however, when some savage outbreak affrighting the
+propriety of a great city arouses indignation and fear that there is
+a clamour for measures of repression. I do not think there is in any
+other part of the world, or that there ever has been in any civilised
+country, such shootings as have filled the land to which I allude with
+bloodshed. It may be said with truth that there never have been and
+that there are not any similar conditions in the world. But the absence
+of any great abiding movement for the correction and suppression of
+violence and lawlessness cannot be so readily accounted for or excused.
+There appears to be a sort of admiration for these border ruffians
+among portions of the American Press and public. Even a staid paper
+like the _Republican_, in an article headed "South-East Missouri: the
+Reign of Lawlessness about Ended," on the destruction of the New Madrid
+gang, writes of one who was sent to the penitentiary for thirty years
+"as a living monument of a bold and brave lot of desperate men who had
+started out to make money by robbing their fellow-men. This swift and
+stern justice speaks well for this portion of the States, which has had
+for a long time more than its full quota of these lawless characters.
+Myers and Brown will be hung on the 15th July, and their execution will
+be witnessed by thousands of South-East Missourians." The spectacle
+of the hanging will not do much good, if it be like the execution at
+Colorado Springs, which was advertised as a sort of picnic or pleasure
+excursion. One advertisement ran, "After the hanging to-morrow drink
+La Salle beer; it will cool your nerves." "Highway robbery here has
+about run its course, and the people are determined that lawlessness
+in those regions shall no longer go unwhipped of justice." Very good.
+But, why not sooner and long ago? "Rhodes was hung by Judge Lynch
+when captured at the killing of young Laforge in New Madrid;" but the
+gang killed the sheriff and wounded the deputy-sheriff and collector
+before the people arose in their majesty to squelch them. A criminal
+is invested with a notoriety which, next to popular estimation, is
+valued by some men, and it is noted with interest that "Gilbert" (one
+pitiless murderer) is a Catholic, and that "Rosengrants" (another
+homicide) "inclines towards the Episcopalians." A Leadville doctor
+visits one of them to ask for his body. "No, sirree, you can't have
+my body; I'll be hanged first!" And the public laugh at the lively
+sally, and admire the _sangfroid_ of the wit! In fact, there is a
+_tendresse_ for crime in this grim humour. A Texan who would "fill the
+skin" of a stranger "with lead" for aspersing Texas would no doubt
+heartily enjoy the description of the early population of the Lone
+Star State, which I quote from the Texas Press. "In the early days
+of the Republic, and even after annexation, many of the white men who
+came here had strong sanitary reasons for a change of climate, having
+been threatened with throat disease so sudden and dangerous that the
+slightest delay in moving to a new and milder climate would have been
+fatal, the subjects dying of dislocation of the spinal vertebræ at the
+end of a few minutes--and a rope. A great many left Arkansas, Indiana,
+and other States in such a hurry that they were obliged to borrow the
+horses on which they rode to Texas. They mostly recovered on reaching
+Austin, and many invalids began to feel better and consider themselves
+out of danger as soon as they crossed the Brancos River. Some who would
+not have lived twenty-four hours longer had they not left their homes
+reached a green old age in Western Texas, and were never again in risk
+of the bronchial affection already referred to by carefully avoiding
+the causes which led to their trouble. Some at Austin recovered so
+far as to be able to run for office, within a year, though defeated
+by a respectable majority, owing to the atmosphere and the popularity
+of the other candidate." The most extraordinary fact connected with
+the indulgence which is extended to Western excesses is the severity
+with which Northern and Eastern writers and publicists deal with
+the recklessness of Southerners with regard to life, as if it were a
+political question in some way connected with slavery. In an article on
+"Colonisation," in the July number of 'The International Review,' there
+is an attempt to prove that the prevalence of homicide in the South as
+compared with the North has impeded the flow of immigrants, although
+slavery has disappeared, and the writer, quoting Mr. Redfield's book
+on 'Homicide North and South,' says the terrible "scourge of open
+murder, wholly irrespective of political causes more deadly than
+disease or yellow fever, because each death is the result of a heinous
+crime, seems to be calmly accepted by public opinion as a part of
+the unchangeable conditions of social life in the South. In Kentucky
+more men are killed in six days than in eight years in Vermont. In a
+village of Connecticut a death from homicide has never occurred from
+its foundation, while in one graveyard in Owen County, Kentucky, the
+majority are murdered men, and in another county forty-two persons
+were killed and forty-three wounded in two years." But in the very same
+number of the 'International' there is an account of the doings of the
+"Vigilance Committee" of San Francisco (where there were no slaves and
+where there is immense wealth), which might cause the author of the
+paper on "Colonisation" to reflect a little on his theories. Surely in
+Arizona, California, &c., where the foreign population is 50 per cent.
+of the natives, immigration has not been checked by the prevalence of
+homicide? It must not be supposed that there is no "law" in the towns
+where these crimes have been committed; in all the cases referred to
+the coroner did his office and verdicts were returned, and it will have
+been seen that "wretches hang" in due course. We had intended to visit
+the State prison at Cañon City on our way to Pueblo from Leadville,
+where we were promised an opportunity of seeing "thirty murderers all
+in a row," but the delay of the train on the road deprived us of the
+means of verifying the statement, and I give it as it was made. It
+would seem as if the criminal supply were super-abundant, or that death
+on the gallows had no deterrent influence. The chances of escape are,
+if not numerous, at least considerable. At Deming, Denver, Leadville,
+Tucson, Tombstone, and other cities, the vast mass of the inhabitants
+are law-abiding, peaceable, honest, and honourable men, who feel as
+much horror at the violence and bloodshed around them as the most
+refined lady in any saloon of Boston, Paris, or London, but they appear
+to endure these things in the hope that the law will be enforced at
+last; now and then they break into vigilance committees and execute
+their own decrees, though the judges do not fail to lay it down that
+they have been accessories to murder. The great civiliser and police
+agent is the railroad. It is affirmed that as the iron way is pushed on
+the outlaws and the _personnel_ of outlawry congregate at the terminal
+town, but I suspect that there is a fringe of the material left on the
+border as it runs. As our party were at dinner in the palace-car one
+evening the train pulled up at a station. There was a group of rough
+men on the platform, who stared in with all their eyes at the white
+tablecloth, set with bright glass and silver, and at the cheerful faces
+under the lamps. "How merry they are. I wonder if they know that this
+is Dodge City?" exclaimed one of the crowd. I was told by an official
+that when they were making a railway in these parts the surveyors, &c.,
+were much troubled by gangs of gamblers and robbers, who impeded the
+work and debauched the men, so after due warning they made a razzia
+on the gamblers, shot a lot of them, and the rest "vamosed." There was
+not very long ago an actual war in the Grand Cañon Valley between the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railway and the Denver and Rio Grande
+Railway, in which there was an array of armed forces and fighting on
+both sides, and we saw with our own eyes the remains of the breastworks
+cast up in the Grand Cañon by the belligerents. The law came in at
+last. "One side got at the judge first and gave him $50,000. The
+other was quite ready to go beyond that, but the first was too quick,
+and the suit went against the company." I was talking to a lawyer
+about the length of time which is allowed by the judges to criminals
+sentenced to death as a detail of the execution of the law not in
+accordance with the general practice of civilised nations, when one
+of the company remarked, "They must do it, sir, to please the people.
+If we had Judas Iscariot in gaol to-morrow there would be thousands
+of petitions to commute his sentence, and thousands of dollars ready
+for an appeal to the Supreme Court. Our people don't like prompt
+sentence." Nevertheless, sentence and execution are pretty swift when
+the desperadoes take the law into their own hands, as we have seen.
+The revolver and the "saloon" are the agents and the scene in most of
+these murders, and whisky is too often the motive power. In Kansas it
+is a criminal offence to sell any intoxicating spirit, or to use it
+except on medical certificate. It is said that the law cannot last, but
+it surely was a very strong conviction of the evils which were endured
+by the community that brought a State Legislature, elected by the
+people, to enact that beer, wine, and spirits should be absolutely and
+entirely banished from its borders. Lately there was a prosecution by
+the State attorney of a man for selling spirits. The case was clearly
+proved. The judge charged the jury in the strongest manner against the
+defendant. The jury without retiring at once found a verdict of "not
+guilty." "Boys," exclaimed the judge, putting his hand on the foreman's
+shoulder, "Boys, I'm quite with you." The Kansas case will be, I think,
+watched with great interest by the rival parties in England, and it is
+certainly worth investigation and attention, for, if all I hear be true
+here, a Parliament elected by the people either in advance or in the
+rear of their constituents have passed a law which judges condemn, and
+juries evade, and public opinion derides.
+
+From a British, which may be an unintelligent, point of view, there
+is a want of logical method in the treatment of the Great Rebellion
+question by Americans. There is a general disposition to speak of the
+war between the Federal Government and the people of the Confederate
+States as an historical fact which has ceased to present burning
+controversies and terrible issues to the Republic. But, at the same
+time, these controversies are kept alive, and, for the defeated, are
+stirred up incessantly by anniversaries and celebrations, natural but,
+if it be the object of Americans, as many of them assure us it is,
+to let the memory of the past die out like that of a horrid dream,
+impolitic. The spirit which animated the Southern States is neither
+dead nor sleeping. But there are no end of G. A. P. and G. A. R.
+Associations flourishing their banners and waving their sheathed swords
+in and out of the newspapers, and it is almost more than Southern
+flesh and blood can bear at times to be reminded of the defeats they
+sustained, even if they be content to admit that the doctrine of the
+sovereignty of States was a delusion, and that the indivisibility of
+the Republic was a fundamental principle of the Constitution before it
+was conclusively established by force of arms.
+
+North and South, our good cousins are fond of anniversaries and
+speechmakings. I wonder where they get their taste for them from?
+Some few veterans dine together on anniversaries of old French war
+days, and there is a Balaclava Dinner in the Old Country; but, though
+we have a reasonably long list of fighting successes to commemorate,
+their anniversaries are mostly left to the almanacks. The other day
+the Americans had a celebration of the Battle of Cowpens, wherein the
+heroic Morgan gave the diabolical Tarleton the deuce of a whipping. I
+wonder if it was worth remembering? But it is better to remember such
+things perhaps than Sherman's Raid or Wilderness--or Chickahominy.
+There are bitternesses enough remaining--the rivalries and jealousies
+of generals are still active and these memories might be left to die
+out.
+
+The great war which so deeply moved the population of the United States
+has left many traces in Soldiers' Homes, and men deprived of legs or
+arms, or bearing marks of indelible wounds, are to be met with wherever
+there is any considerable gathering of people all over the Union. The
+clerk at the bar of the hotel, to whom we were talking a moment ago,
+was a captain in a regiment of militia, and served with distinction,
+having risen to the grade he occupies by conduct and courage during the
+war; and if he is known among his friends by the title of "Colonel,"
+he deserves, probably, the brevet conferred upon him by the authority
+of the general public around him. The conductor of the train on the
+Pennsylvania Railroad, to whose attention we were so much indebted, was
+an ex-officer of volunteers, was engaged at the first battle of Bull
+Run, where he was wounded, and in several other actions. And our good
+friend the Major, who enabled us to pass many an hour listening to his
+admirable rendering of negro minstrelsy, bore in his body a proof of
+the dangers he had passed, in the shape of a Confederate bullet, or
+it might have been (for I am not quite sure now) a projectile of the
+Federal persuasion. And so on. Scarcely a day passed that we did not
+meet someone who had been fighting on one side or the other.
+
+One great change has come over Americans since I was last here, and,
+whether it was the ridicule to which they were exposed or to a sense
+of their greatness as a nation that it be due, it is to be commended.
+Except by a professional interviewer, not one of the party was asked,
+"What do you think, sir, of our country?"!
+
+The welcome which an Englishman who is entitled to admission into
+good society receives all over the States, in the best houses, and
+from the best men, is as gracious and warm as ever. It seems as if a
+reaction against the suspicion, jealousy, and harshness which marred
+the political relations of the Republic and Great Britain in times gone
+by, moved those who behave with so much courtesy to Englishmen, and
+that they seem to say, _sotto voce_, "Come and see how I forget the
+wrongs done to the United States by the Ministers of George III. and
+his successors! Admit that I can be as magnanimous as I am rich and
+cultivated! I am of your house, but I have transplanted all the good
+qualities of your race to American soil, and grafted them on the tree
+of liberty which towers aloft in all the splendour of Transatlantic
+luxuriance above us."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the
+ Maori.
+
+
+On the 5th of May the party visited Carlisle Fort or Barracks, one of
+the ancient military establishments of the Republic, where in the old
+times, speaking in an American sense, a considerable force was usually
+concentrated to keep watch and ward over the western frontiers, now
+extended thousands of miles away to the Pacific. The Barrack, which
+is a large quadrangle capable of containing a couple of regiments, is
+appropriated by the Government to this great experiment, the systematic
+education of the Indians of both sexes, whose families send them to
+school for the purpose of learning English and useful arts, mechanical
+and other, which may be of advantage to their people. It was, perhaps,
+one of the most interesting of the many little excursions which the
+Duke of Sutherland and his friends made in the States, and as it was
+the only one of the schools which we had an opportunity of seeing I
+shall proceed to give a little account of what we witnessed. In the
+first place let me express the sense which every one of us entertained
+of the real sterling qualities of Captain Pratt who is in charge of
+the school, and of the devotion and solicitude for their charges of
+those ladies employed in the training establishment. It may be asked
+how casual visitors could judge of these things? The discipline,
+order, progress, and perfect method visible in every room, and the
+intelligence and good understanding between the teachers and the pupils
+which could be perceived throughout the establishment, were adequate
+proofs, I think, that the praise is well deserved. At the time of our
+visit there were something under three hundred pupils, of whom perhaps
+two hundred were boys, and these were engaged in their class-rooms,
+each section of Indians being arranged according to nationality, if
+such a term can be used. But, indeed, the tribes of Indians differed
+from each other in personal appearance far more than do the races
+which inhabit the European continent. It is true they nearly all have
+straight wire-like black hair and eyes set deeply and rather obliquely
+in faces which are frequently of the Mongol type. But there is great
+diversity in the shape of the head, the angle of the jaw, the formation
+of the mouth and nose, the colour (when not tainted or "improved" by
+an admixture of European blood, whether Mexican or American or other)
+being pretty uniform, a rich bronze, with something of a copper hue,
+predominating in the young people. The boys were dressed in a plain
+neat uniform of greyish-blue, military tunics and trousers, well shod
+and comfortably equipped in all respects. The girls, amongst whom,
+perhaps, taste for eccentric finery was not unobservable, wore dresses
+less uniform in appearance, generally neat and always clean; but
+their foot gear was rather eccentric. The rooms, spacious barrack-like
+apartments, well ventilated, were appropriated to the classes according
+to age and progress, the boys being separated from the girls. The walls
+were hung with maps and furnished with educational coloured prints, and
+boards for arithmetical exercises were in each apartment. The desks and
+stools were such as would be seen in an ordinary school, and if one had
+not looked at the faces of the pupils and been struck by some of the
+strange characters on the walls he would have thought himself in the
+middle of some ordinary school; save, perhaps, that his ear would have
+missed the curious humming noise which marks the industry of idleness
+or of legitimate work in similar establishments in Europe. But here
+were all these young savages, poring over their books or boring with
+their pens, looking up at the visitors scarcely with curiosity and
+applying themselves again to their work, or answering questions put
+to them with the composure which must be a portion of the Red Man's
+nature.
+
+I cannot recollect how many tribes there were represented at the
+Carlisle school; but I was struck by the race-distinctions which could
+be observed when Captain Pratt, standing on a raised platform, called
+out the names of each tribe. The little batches, in some instances
+only one or two, stood up briskly and looked somewhat proudly about,
+as much as to say, "We are Sioux (or Apaches, or Ponchas, or Creeks),
+not like these other fellows." And the young ladies were, if one might
+judge from their expression, quite as proud of their own people as the
+boys. But the names these poor children receive are ludicrous. Not
+content with calling them by English names, or American, singularly
+misapplied, very often, as a name may be, their own Indian nomenclature
+is translated into English, so that we heard reading and reciting
+beside "Luke Phillips" and "Almarine McKillip" (a Scotch Creek)
+"Maggie Stands-looking" and "Reuben Quick-bear." There was something
+of sarcasm, I think, in the address of a Creek boy to the visitors. He
+said: "The Indian boys had come here to learn something about the use
+of the bow and hunting. Their people believed that if boys grew up to
+manhood without learning they would be of no use; therefore they had
+sent the boys here to get education." Then, after some moral if trite
+reflections, the lad said: "You must understand that nearly everything
+that was made was made both for the present and the future. This
+barracks was not built for Indians, as I do not think the men who built
+it ever thought that it would be an Indian school; but things were made
+to do good both in the present and in the future." And then quoth he,
+looking at his white friends straight in the face: "The education which
+we are getting here is not like our own land, but it is something that
+cannot be stolen nor bought from us." And the white man did not turn
+red at the words! I do not pretend to judge of the actual progress made
+in learning, but the very intelligent self-possessed teachers reported
+uniformly that they were satisfied. The most useful education, perhaps,
+which these Indians receive is in practical mechanics, and a visit to
+the workshops attached to the barracks was amply repaid by the sight
+of these industrious young fellows hammering and leathering away in
+the various departments. They have actually completed waggons of a most
+satisfactory construction, complete in all their parts, so much so that
+orders have been received for as many as can be supplied for the use
+of Agencies. They make and repair their own shoes. They have sent out
+a hundred and twenty double sets of harness. They make coffee-boilers,
+cups, pans, pails, and all the articles known to the tin-smith; and the
+girls are taught to hem and sew and knit in the English fashion; but it
+must have been not many a long year before the white man landed, when
+the ancestors of these Indian maidens exercised the same mystery with
+fine sinew and skin in the wonderful work of which specimens are handed
+down to us to-day. On one point alone, perhaps, there was something to
+regret; the health of the children was not all that could be desired.
+Well clad, regularly fed, I presume on wholesome food, cleanly lodged
+in well-ventilated rooms, these wild children of the plains scarcely
+came up to the expectations one would form of them in the matter of
+chest-measurement; and although many were remarkable for fine physical
+development, Captain Pratt confessed that their sanitary condition was
+not everything that could be desired, and that losses from consumption
+and other causes were rather serious. But they have plenty of out-door
+exercise. They have games in which they rejoice. They drill and
+march to the sound of their own band, a very good brass band of eight
+performers, each of a different tribe, who played "Hail Columbia!"
+and the "Star-Spangled Banner," and the like, with energy and zest;
+nay, with harmonious concurrence. When we went out into the large open
+square, there appeared before us a wonderful being in feathers, waving
+plumes, wampum and all the leathern panoply and peltry adornments of
+an Indian, painted, and armed with bow and arrow, probably such an one
+as Captain John Smith may have seen as he went exploring the woods
+of Virginia on his way to the sacrifice from which he was saved by
+Pocahontas. A target was erected at a distance of a hundred yards or
+so, and had I been in the centre of it, I should have been perfectly
+safe from the arrows which the Indian warrior discharged at it. But
+we were told that with a good bow a strong-armed Indian will drive an
+arrow right through a buffalo, and in that case I would suppose that
+the buffalo was very near to him indeed.
+
+Of course it is but natural to find very varying degrees of
+intelligence amongst the pupils, and the rate of progress was by no
+means uniform, but a committee of examination which recently visited
+the school declared that the manifestations of advancement in the
+rudiments of English education were to them simply surprising. It was
+with admiration bordering on amazement they observed the facility and
+accuracy with which the children passed through the various exercises,
+in reading, geography, arithmetic, and writing, of the schoolroom;
+the accurate training and the amount of knowledge displayed were, they
+reported, the fullest proof not only of skilful teaching, but of great
+aptitude and diligence on the part of the children. Considering the
+brief period during which the school had been in operation, and the
+fact that the children entered it in a wholly untutored condition,
+the evidence was conclusive of the capability of culture. They go on
+to say: "We are fully persuaded that improvement equal to that which
+we have witnessed in the case of these children of the plains, if
+made in equal time by American children, would be regarded as quite
+unusual. And when the difficulty of communication consequent upon the
+diversities of language is taken into account we can but feel that the
+results of which we have been the witnesses to-day justify our judgment
+of them as amazing."
+
+One of the most interesting features connected with the attempts
+to educate the Indians at Carlisle is the 'School News,' a little
+publication which, as I understand, is conducted by Indian pupils
+taught in the establishment, edited by Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee Indian
+boy. It is published once a month, and costs 25 cents or 1_s._ per
+year. It takes as its motto the lines:
+
+ "A pebble cast into the sea is felt from shore to shore,
+ A thought from the mind set free will echo on for ever more."
+
+Perhaps neither the metre nor the actual statement commend themselves
+to acceptance, but the matter of the little journal is full of
+interest. In the first place the names of the contributors afford
+full matter for meditation. Perhaps it is one of the steps which
+must be taken to civilise these poor Indians that their names should
+undergo a strange and, to me, unmeaning metamorphose. There seems no
+reason whatever why the Indian names should not be retained, or if
+there is any reason for changing them, at least there might be some
+discrimination and good taste exercised in the adoption of English
+Christian names.
+
+The first number of the 'School News,' which I have before me, contains
+as an article: "What Michael Burns, an Apache boy, thinks on the Indian
+Question." He says, "I cannot help myself, having much feeling for my
+people, what has been said about them, and the efforts making to give
+us the same privileges as the people of the United States. And it is
+said how we have been treated by the bad white man, for the last ten
+or fifteen years, decreasing our number. But that kind for treatment
+for my nation will soon stop." The poor boy goes on to say: "There is
+no doubt that we are in fault. We had the opinion that we could not
+get beaten by any other nation. Now we know for ourselves that we will
+have to change.... But how does the white man know which way is the
+best to do. Was he born that way? No! Education gives him the light
+of knowledge." Then a boy named Marcus Poko writes to his father: "I
+want you to try hard and leave the Comanche way, and to find the white
+man's way." In the leading article, written, I presume, by Samuel
+Townsend, it is said: "Indian ways will never be good any more, it
+is all passed, gone away, and the other way is coming up to take the
+place. We shall all be glad when we all get into the civilised way of
+living, then the Indians will not make so much trouble for the American
+people. Some people say 'let the Indians get out of the way. There
+is no use in trying to advance them, kill them all they are like the
+wild animals deaf and dumb, they never will learn anything. We have
+already paid so much money for them they have never become civilised
+yet.' But all good people say, 'Oh, yes, give them an education and
+plenty of opportunities, and send more teachers among them so they may
+come up beside us and live as brothers and live in peace.'" There is a
+little paragraph as to language. "There are a great many words in the
+English," says the writer, "that the Indians have no word for, so the
+white people who make the Indian books have to make new Indian words.
+So the Indians have to learn the new Indian words. Now we don't know
+much about it, but we believe the Indians can all learn to speak the
+same as the whites." Then there is a column about the school news:
+"Lizzie McRae, a Creek girl, made a very good corn bread the other
+day. We had some of it. It was right good I tell you." "Robert American
+Horse is a steady boy. He works in the blacksmith shop very well, and
+Mr. Harris never has to tell him but once how to do something." "One
+of the teachers had artificial violets on her belt. A Gros Ventre boy
+saw them, but did not know what they were, so he got up from his desk
+and went close to the teacher. He looked at it and then smelt it. When
+he smelt it he said, 'Pooh! rags!'" "Boys, some time ago Captain Pratt
+gave us advice about throwing stones at birds. Some of the boys who
+understand most English did not listen. We want the birds to come and
+stay with us and sing for us, too. Let us remember about this, and
+not let Captain Pratt have to say it again." "Last Sunday some of the
+large girls had a prayer-meeting in the yard at the back of the girls'
+quarters. Nobody told them to do it, but they thought it would be a
+good thing." There is a long letter from Lizzie Walton, a Pawnee girl
+of thirteen years old, describing a trip to Philadelphia, and I believe
+there are very few girls of thirteen years of age in any school who
+could write more amusingly or better. The account of a magic lantern by
+Ada Bent, a Cheyenne girl, closes the number.
+
+Letters from the children who are sent out to the farmers are published
+in this little periodical, and give a very pleasing picture of the
+lives and aptitudes of these Indians. Virginia, of Kiowar, writes from
+a farm, asking one of the teachers to pardon her for not having done so
+before; but "I have not much time," she says, "I am very busy set the
+table and wash dishes make my bed and make pies and cakes and try to
+make bread too, and the other things beside.... Sometime I make fire
+and bring in wood. Mrs. Borton is very kind lady she has two children
+one girl and boy. I love these little children very much." "My dear
+Miss H----, I am not bad a girl. I help now a great deal. I pray for
+you almost every night, also when I wake up in the morning. I like to
+pray very much because I make myself good." And so on in a pleasant
+little gossiping way, frequently in very difficult language. There is
+an article in the 'School News' of July upon the shooting of President
+Garfield: "The man who shot him," says the writer, "we suppose, thought
+he would please some of the people in the United States. He thought he
+was very smart. If President were to die how would every white man,
+black man and the Indian feel? It was not in war when the President
+was shot, for our country don't have war any more, but in peace....
+We all feel sorry because the President is suffering. We hope he
+will soon recover." It is stated that about a hundred boys and girls
+have gone out to work on the farms, and there are some trite remarks
+about the advantages of hard work as opposed to the disadvantages of
+laziness. "The farmers up country say the Indian boys can bind wheat
+first-rate." "Nelly Cook, Sioux, made 36 sheets in one day last week.
+Nellie Cary, Apache, made 32, and Ella Moore, Creek, made 30. Boys, do
+you think those girls are lazy?" The 'School News' has a reporter, it
+would appear, for the paper says that "Our reporter took a walk round
+in the shops to see what the boys were doing. In all the shops every
+boy was busy. In the carpenter shop there were Jock (Arapahoe), Ralph
+(Sioux), Elwood (Iowa), and Joe Gun (Ponca) sawing out window and door
+frames. Oscar (Cheyenne) and Michael Burns (Apache) were busy carving
+balcony posts; and Lester (Arapahoe) was outside chiselling a beam.
+These things are all for our new hospital.... Jesse (Arapahoe) and
+Little Elk (Cheyenne) were busy in the gymnasium. The waggons which
+Robert American Horse has finished painting are to be sent to Oregon
+and Washington Territories." It is sometimes difficult to make out
+the meaning of the little prattle which these small people commit to
+the uncertain medium of the English tongue; but, on the whole, it is
+a most interesting and curious study. In one respect these children
+of the forest possess that which civilisation seems rather to dwarf
+amongst men of the highest culture and imagination--a certain stately
+eloquence and nobility of expression, in which natural images abound,
+and allegory and metaphor consort together in excellent and tasteful
+union. In a paper called 'Eadle Keatah Toh,' which seems to have been
+the precursor of the 'School News,' there is an interesting report
+from the Committee on Indian Affairs to the House of Representatives,
+submitted by Mr. Pound. The motto of the paper is "God helps those
+who help themselves"; but surely it might be better put that God will
+help those who seek to do good to the unfortunate Indians, who in
+contact with civilisation are rendered utterly helpless, and who in
+their attempts to help themselves according to the manner of the race
+must meet with nothing but extinction. From time to time there are
+notices of deaths. One would like to know who wrote the account of the
+"death of John Renville, son of Gabriel Renville, Chief of the Sisseton
+Sioux." After noticing the circumstances under which he contracted his
+fatal illness--fever, produced by drinking water at a spring on a hot
+day on a march to the camp in Perry County, the writer says:--"'Death
+loves a shining mark,' the poet sang long ago; and in the passing away
+of John Renville from our school we sadly say, how truthfully the poet
+sang.... Through all the days of his sickness his large sorrowful eyes
+had a far-away wondering look, no pain marred the beauty of his brow,
+and his voice as he addressed his sister, who tenderly watched over
+him, was like the trumpet warbling of some mournful bird. Our hearts
+follow the father in deep sympathy as he bears back the body of his
+beautiful boy to the land of the Dakotas for burial."
+
+The Indian chiefs have a right, which they often exercise, of visiting
+these schools as a Board; and there is an account in the Carlisle paper
+of the visit of Spotted Tail, Iron Wing, White Thunder, Black Crow,
+and Louis Robideau from the Rosebud Agency; Red Cloud, American Horse,
+Red Dog, Red Shirt, Little Wound, and Two Strike from the Pine Ridge
+Agency; Like the Bear and Medicine Bull from the Lower Brule Agency;
+Son of the Star, Poor Wolf, Peter Beauchamp, and John Smith from Fort
+Berthold; Two Bears, John Big Head, Grass, Thunder Hawk, and Louis
+Primeau from Standing Rock; Charger and Bull Eagle from Cheyenne River;
+Brother to All and James Broadhead from Crow Creek; Strike the Ree
+and Jumping Thunder from Yankton; Robert Hakewashte and Eli Abraham
+from Santee Agency; Mr. Tackett and his wife and daughter; a daughter
+of Spotted Tail, and others. The meeting of the children with their
+parents is described as being most touching; and sometimes the pupils
+were not recognised, so greatly had they altered. As the chiefs seemed
+unwilling to speak when called upon to do so, there was silence for a
+time till a little girl, who had been about a year and a half at the
+school, expressed her desire to speak in so earnest a way that General
+Marshall permitted her to do so; and so, speaking in her own dialect,
+her words were translated into English and into Sioux. She declared
+that she liked the white man's ways and the white man's language.
+Indian words, she said, were down on the ground, but the white man's
+language was in his head. The chiefs, who listened attentively, seemed
+to understand this curious figure of speech, and nodded their approval.
+And then she enlarged upon the advantage of what she learned, and
+implored the chiefs to send their children to the school, where she
+says she is going to try to be God's daughter. Her words seemed to
+kindle the fire within the chieftains' breasts, for Like the Bear, a
+Sioux, and father of one of the boys at Hampton School, came forward
+and addressed the meeting. "There is no greater power in the world,"
+said he, "than the Great Spirit, and we must listen to Him and do
+what He wants us to do. When the men who were sent out by the Great
+Father the President asked for my children I gave them up. I see you
+are making brains for my children, and you are making eyes for them so
+that they can see. That is what I thank the Great Spirit for, and it is
+that which will make me strong." Then Robert Hakewashte, a chief from
+the Santee Agency, spoke, and said that he wanted schools like that
+which he saw here on his own reservation, and Spotted Tail wished for
+the same thing. "Since I have learned the words of God," he says, "it
+makes no difference to me what is the colour of a man's skin; if he
+walks like a man it is the same. I do not believe God likes the white
+colour only. God likes red and white, for He made them all." And then
+the flood of eloquence was loosened, and an old chief of the Sioux,
+nearly blind, verging on ninety years of age, who had come to see his
+grandson, said: "I grew up a red man, and the things I see here I never
+had a chance to see before. I have heard about the white man's church
+and his religion, and I have heard about the holy house. I have looked
+into them, and I am very much pleased. But there is only one Great
+Spirit we all can worship, and the red men all over the country are
+hearing about it. You are teaching the children to worship the Great
+Spirit. That is a great thing, and I like it. But you have here two
+sons of one father. One is sick. I want you to keep the other." And so
+he carried him away.
+
+The condition of the Red Man who is allowed to exist under the banner
+of the Republic is a subject which has attracted the attention of the
+best and wisest men in the United States. The treatment of the Indians
+is a question of future policy. It is one which must exercise a very
+deep and abiding influence on the whole history of an ancient and
+interesting people. But it is exceedingly difficult to put in a short
+compass its most salient points before those who are unacquainted with
+the nature of the problems to be solved. Comparisons are odious, above
+all places, in America, when they are not to the advantage of the Great
+Republic, and I shall not draw any between the state of the Indian
+tribes in Canada and in the States. But it may be fairly admitted that
+the Indian Question in Canada is divested of many of the difficulties
+which surround it south of the lakes. The people of Canada have far
+more land than they know what to do with. They are a sparse population.
+They are not impelled to fierce adventures by mining "booms," and they
+are altogether less progressive than their American brethren. Shall we
+say that they are more charitable, more humane, less greedy of other
+men's goods? I do not say so. But at all events it is perfectly true
+that the Red Man, although he is dying out under the influence of
+whiskey and other influences which need not be particularised, in his
+native land, lives in comparative peace and comfort under the British
+flag in Canada. He is content with the White Mother. He pursues the
+occupations dear to his race as a hunter and as a fisherman. He is a
+dealer in peltries, and in such small barter as his needs require. He
+is the companion of sportsmen, and he delights, free as mountain air,
+to hunt on the hillside and in the prairie in winter over the vast
+ranges of snowy fields which in the few short months of spring and
+summer teem with flowers, and the frosty lakes which yield fish to his
+spear and net. There are few or no railways through his reservations
+to vex his repose, no great trains of miners with pick and rifle to
+drive away the moose and the buffalo, and hand the native hunter over
+to starvation. The Indian gives to the white man all he needs, and aids
+him in obtaining from the wide stretch of land over which he roams all
+the wealth that it can afford. Practically one part of the Dominion
+is handed over to the Red Man and to the half-breeds, for there is an
+Indian frontier which as yet has not been much encroached upon by any
+large migration of whites. As far as I know, conflicts north of the
+Saint Lawrence between Indians and whites are unknown, or have not
+been heard of for very many years. South of the great lakes, in the
+wonderful land over which is displayed the banner of the stars and
+stripes, the fate of the Indian is very different. In the words of Mr.
+Carl Schurz, himself an expert in the question, "the history of the
+relations of the United States with the Red Man presents in great part
+a record of broken treaties, of unjust wars and of cruel spoliation."
+That is a sweeping statement, which it would be just as well for
+an Englishman not to make, but coming from the mouth of an American
+citizen and of a United States Minister with plenty of evidence to back
+it, there can be no harm in recording my conviction of its truth. It is
+but another indictment against a defect in the form of government which
+Americans exalt as the most perfect of human institutions, that the
+central government made treaties in good faith with the Indian tribes,
+but was unable to enforce their obligations or to maintain their
+integrity. There is, as all well-informed people know--well informed,
+at least, in reference to American affairs--a commissioner who makes an
+annual report to the Secretary of the Interior respecting the Indian
+tribes in the various locations over the Union and the Territories.
+The last of these reports which I have seen is that of the Acting
+Commissioner Mr. Marble, addressed to the Department of the Interior
+from the office of Indian Affairs at Washington in the November of
+last year. The volume contains the reports of the agents in the Indian
+Territory; of the schools for Indian children established in pursuance
+of a wise and humane policy, and detailed statistics in relation to the
+Indian settlements and reservations, the latter indeed forming by far
+the largest portion of the volume of 400 pages. Before I call attention
+to the condition of the Indians, and the efforts made to save them from
+extinction or from a degradation worse than annihilation, I should like
+to direct the attention of those who are interested in the subject
+to the view which is beginning to find favour, I believe, among the
+most experienced men in the States, that the system of "Reservations"
+is founded on a mistake the magnitude of which is demonstrated every
+day, and that the only means of saving the Indians from extinction is
+their gradual absorption as educated communities in the agricultural
+life of the nation, keeping them far as may be from the white man,
+but making no other distinction between them and the other citizens
+of the United States than such as must be found in the nature of the
+Indian race and their degree of culture and civilisation--treating
+them, in fact, as communities of Mennonites, Mormons, or Norwegians,
+or other nationalities would be treated in the United States. When
+the Reservations were first established it was considered impossible
+that the migration of the whites would extend to the remote regions of
+the west to which the unfortunate survivors of the people with whose
+virtues and vices Cooper and other novelists have made us familiar were
+gradually and often remorselessly driven. It is a plea which will be
+urged in bar of judgment that the doctrine of States Rights prevented
+the interference of the United States Government on behalf of the
+Indian tribes who were often ruthlessly destroyed. But it will scarcely
+be a plea, I think, which humanity in full court would recognise as
+valid. _Homo homini lupus._ But to the Red Man as to the Black in many
+cases the White Man is worse than any wolf; far more bloodthirsty and
+rapacious than any tiger--a Cain of Cains. It was our own kith and kin
+who, landing on the shores of the North American continent, encroaching
+by degrees upon the tribes and at last encountering their hostility,
+spread their sway literally by fire and sword, and rooted out the
+Red Man wherever they found him established on land or by sea which
+they coveted. We, whose countrymen have worked out the same policy on
+the Australian continent and Van Diemen's Land, and who can only be
+restrained from its pursuit in New Zealand by the strong arm of the
+Home Government, can scarcely afford to take up stones to fling at our
+American brethren; and it is not with any purpose of indictment or
+accusation that I proceed to make a few remarks on the relations of
+the United States Government with the Red Man, and the efforts which
+they have been making to compensate the Indians in some measure for the
+injustice and persecution dealt out for many a generation.
+
+As I looked at the men gathered at some of the railroad stations in
+the western desert and thought of the Red Men whose fate it is to
+meet such representatives of civilisation and Christianity, I could
+not but be filled with pity for the unfortunates and with wonder at
+"the dispensation" under which they live. The faces are fine and bold
+enough, bearded to the cheek or shaved in the American fashion, with
+bold staring eyes, which "look square" in your own, with a general
+expression "Do you want a fight?" in them--the heads to which they
+belong are generally set on muscular bodies. If a gang of these men
+think fit to go on to an Indian reservation--the very name is too often
+a bitter mockery--who is to stop them? If the Indians try to do so and
+one of the white intruders is killed the country-side rings with cries
+of "vengeance for the massacre of our brethren," and all the papers are
+filled with accounts of "Another Indian Outbreak."
+
+"The average frontier-man in the States looks," as Mr. Schurz says,
+"upon the Indian merely as a nuisance in his way. There are many
+whom it would be difficult to convince that it is a crime to kill an
+Indian." I will go further and say that there are many, I believe, who
+would take great pleasure in killing an Indian whenever they could;
+or as one gentleman observed to me, and I believe in his relations
+with white men no more just or honourable man or more humane could be
+found, "I would sooner kill an Indian than I would a skunk." When I
+was in the West, there was a cry raised that the Utes were about to
+wage war, and appeals appeared in the local papers for a military force
+to march against them. Their leaders were accused of arrogance and of
+insolence, and of murderous designs, and the general remark one heard
+was, "The Utes must go." I inquired a little into the matter when I got
+back, and I found that the Utes were strictly and absolutely, in their
+own right, standing upon the titles, which they had derived from the
+United States Government, to the lands from which they were required
+to move. These lands were wanted. Other lands were pointed out to them,
+to which they objected, and then they were informed that they would be
+moved by force, and preparations were made to levy war against these
+unfortunates, if they resisted deportation from the territory which
+had been assigned to them by the Great Father. Had they been Irish
+landlords, they could not have been treated worse; but in the West not
+one word was raised in favour of their claims.
+
+The first point which has to be considered is, that the Indian is
+obnoxious to the very class of men with whom he is by the necessity
+of things most closely brought in contact. The railway has been the
+great persecutor of Red Men. It has driven away the game, it has
+carried in proximity to their reservations all the enterprise charged
+with whiskey, revolver, rifle, and greed, which can be furnished by
+the offscourings of the world. In the Far West the miners in advance
+throng into the valleys, and break the silence of the mountain-ranges
+by the sound of their picks, the cattle-raisers spread out over the
+plains, the ploughman settles down on the fertile land. "What," asks
+the American philanthropist, and his question is echoed all over the
+world by humane and good men, "what is to become of the Indian?" The
+hunting-grounds are gradually being pushed farther west and north
+until they are bounded by the sea, and by the eternal snow. And if by
+any chance it should be found that there is gold or lead, silver or
+iron, or copper, or coal in any abundance, even under these unpromising
+conditions it will be sought. The buffalo is disappearing fast, faster
+than the Indian himself. Deer are becoming scarcer every year. What
+is to be left for the Red Man? Pastoral life and agriculture, say
+the philanthropists. The substitution, however, is not so easy. The
+weakness of the United States Government is the main cause why the
+policy of reservations has failed. Let us take the account of it by a
+United States Minister. "The Government," says Mr. Schurz, "has tried
+to protect the Indians in good faith against encroachments, and has
+failed. It has yielded to the pressure exercised upon it by people in
+immediate contact with the Indians. When a collision between Indians
+and whites once occurred, no matter who was responsible for it, our
+military forces were always found on the side of the white against the
+savage. How was Government to proclaim that white men should for ever
+be excluded from the millions of acres covered by Indian reservations,
+and that the national power would be exerted to do so?" Such an
+idea the American Minister thinks would be utterly preposterous. The
+rough and ready frontier-man would pick quarrels with the Indians;
+the speculators would urge him on. Government could not prevent
+collisions; the conflict once brought on, Government, in spite of its
+good intentions and sense of justice, would find itself employing its
+forces to hunt down the Indian. The old story would be repeated, as it
+will be wherever, says Mr. Schurz, there is a large and valuable Indian
+Reservation surrounded by white settlements, "and unjust, disgraceful
+as it is, that is an inevitable result." Such being the case then,
+the United States Government being powerless to see that right shall
+be done, and it being at once a human and a Christian duty to avert,
+if possible, the extinction of the original possessors of this grand
+continent, let us see what can be done to carry out the object. Fit the
+Indians, it is said, for the habits and occupations of civilised life;
+give them individual possession of land as property, a fee-simple title
+to the fields they cultivate, guarded by an absolute prohibition of
+sale--because it has been found that whenever the Indians are exposed
+to the temptation of artful traders, they will be cajoled out of the
+titles they have to their land--and you will save the remnants from
+utter destruction. I hope it will be so. I could not but feel a glow
+of enthusiasm when I heard the Attorney-General, Mr. MacVeagh, at
+Washington, speaking incidentally one day about some railway matter,
+declare that he would not sanction the making of a line of railway
+through Indian Territory until he was satisfied that the Indians
+actually understood the conditions which had been offered to them by
+the company. "I will," said Mr. MacVeagh, "send down government agents
+there to ascertain that the Indians thoroughly understand what they
+are doing, and that it is of their own free will and consent that the
+railway passes through their territory in exchange for the money and
+goods they receive for the concession." Excellent and just minister!
+But, alas! I believe that ere I left the United States the whole thing
+was done; the railway company had declared that they would, whether
+or no, make their line, and if an Indian touched a hair of the head of
+any white man, the United States Government would not be able to avert
+the Divine wrath of every white man on the border from the whole of
+the tribe. Well may Mr. Schurz say that the thought of exterminating a
+race once the only occupants of the soil, where so many millions of our
+own people have flourished, must be revolting to every American who is
+not devoid of all sentiments of justice and humanity. Extermination or
+civilisation is the alternative offered to the Indian. Now let us see
+how it is proposed to civilise them. According to the returns in the
+Report for 1880, the number of Indians in the United States, exclusive
+of those in Alaska, is 256,127. Of these, 138,642 are described as
+wearing citizen's dress. It will be observed that there is no estimate
+given of the Indians who do not wear citizen's dress under this head.
+Citizens must be sometimes very badly dressed indeed if the Indians I
+saw at various stations along the line to San Francisco in shocking
+bad hats and tattered clothes were to be included amongst those who
+figured under this description in the report of the Commissioner. About
+17,000 houses are reported as occupied. There are 224 schools, attended
+by 6000 scholars for a month or more during the year, scattered over
+the continent. About 34,550 Indians could read. There were 154 church
+buildings and 74 missionaries. The number of children of school age was
+34,541; but this was an under estimate. Of these there was only school
+accommodation for 9972. The total amount expended for education during
+the year by the United States Government was $249,299; by the State of
+New York, $15,863; by the State of Pennsylvania, $325; by other States,
+nothing; by religious societies, $46,933; by tribal funds, $7481.
+22,048 Indian families were engaged in cultivating farms or small
+patches of ground; 33,125 male Indians were labouring in civilised
+pursuits; and 358 Indian apprentices had been pursuing trades during
+the year. This census and these statistics are stated to be imperfect,
+and it would require a close examination of the returns to enable an
+inquirer to form any idea as to the progress made in the direction
+which we are told is the alternative of destruction.
+
+The Reservations of the various Indian tribes are scattered irregularly
+over the United States; from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota on
+the north and north-west, away to the Territories on the other side
+of the Rocky Mountains, down to New Mexico and Arizona, there being
+none in the southern states bordering the Atlantic. But there are
+Red Men of different tribes located, as the Americans would say, in
+the States to the east, such as New York. The Reservations are of
+irregular size and extent. Isabella, in the State of Maine, reserved
+for 848 Indians, lies to the east of 86° longitude, and south of 44°
+latitude. There is a considerable group of Reservations on the western
+shore of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, and in Minnesota. But the proper
+Indian territory lies west of Arkansas, with the Red River on the
+south, New Mexico on the west, and Kansas on the north; and in it are
+concentrated the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chicasaws, Comanches, Cheyennes,
+and several other tribes. The Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and
+Arizona ranks perhaps next in size, extending northwards into Colorado,
+where the Utes have got a large tract of land assigned to them upon
+what appears now to be very doubtful or vanishing tenure. These, and
+numerous reservations, which it would be tedious to enumerate, are
+under the charge of agents appointed by the Government at Washington,
+as to whose functions and personal character and attainments one
+hears very surprising and contradictory reports. But I confess, from
+a perusal of the documents which they have furnished to the head of
+the Department, and which are published in the Annual Report, there
+seems to me no just ground for imputing to these gentlemen want of
+zeal, knowledge, interest, or intelligence. Those who detest the whole
+work of saving the Red Man are very apt to impute to the Indian agents
+not only corrupt practices in relation to the sale of government
+stores and supplies destined for the use of those under their charge,
+but illicit traffic in spirits, which is ruinous to the Red Man, and
+even some participation in the acts of violence which have frequently
+led to Indian troubles. It all depends upon the manner in which your
+informant in the States regards the Indian Question whether the agents
+are described as scoundrels whom no man could trust, or as gentlemen of
+high propriety and general excellence.
+
+The necessities which have been imposed by advancing civilisation
+of providing Indians with food entail a heavy outlay upon the United
+States Government, which is much begrudged by large sections of members
+of Congress, although they do not see their way clearly to withhold
+supplies of food from the unfortunate people whose hunting-grounds have
+been occupied, and who have not yet learned the arts of agriculture,
+so as to be able to supply themselves with food. The transportation of
+stores, the cost of beef, corn, coffee, bread, tobacco, tea; in fact,
+all kinds of food, woollen goods, clothing, boots, hats, groceries,
+waggons, tools, hardware, and medical supplies,--all these duly figure
+in the estimates of the Indian Commissioner to a very considerable
+amount, and the returns as yet do not present any large reduction on
+the annual charge; although nearly all the agents speak in terms of
+great hopefulness of the extraordinary advance which has been made in
+their agencies in the cultivation of the soil.
+
+One remarkable division of the agencies has reference to their
+appropriation to religious denominations. An Indian might well
+be puzzled as to his form of belief if he were passed through the
+various agencies, attending at each a religious service or two, and
+listening to the teaching of the various divines attached to them. The
+Society of Friends have control of the belief and religious teaching
+of the Sante and Nemaja Indians in Nebraska, and of the Pawnees in
+the Indian Territory; to the Methodists are assigned three tribes in
+California, three tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, three
+in Montana, two in Idaho, and one in Michigan. The Nevada Cherokees,
+Creeks, Choctaws, Chicasaws, and Seminoles are handed over to the
+Baptists. The Presbyterians have charge of the Nezpercès in Idaho,
+Umtas in Utah; the Apaches, Pueblos, and two other tribes in New
+Mexico. The Congregational Church exercises its religious offices
+among the tribes in Wisconsin, among two tribes in Dacotah, and one
+in Washington Territory. The Reformed Church has its work cut out for
+it in Arizona amongst four tribes. The Protestant Episcopal Church
+exercises its jurisdiction over one tribe in Minnesota, six tribes in
+Dacotah, one in Indian Territory, and one in Wyoming. The Unitarians
+have apparently only one tribe in teaching, the Los Pinos in Colorado.
+The United Presbyterians have one tribe in Oregon; the Christian Union
+has another in Oregon; the Evangelical Lutheran has charge of the
+Southern Utes in Colorado; and lastly, the Roman Catholic Church has
+two tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, one in Montana,
+and two in Dacotah. As a general rule, the reports of the missionaries
+themselves are more sanguine, as they are wont to be, than are those
+of disinterested, perhaps unprejudiced, observers of their work. But,
+as is natural, the actual progress made depends very much, not only
+upon the nature of the tribe among whom the work is carried on, but
+on the character of the missionary, and on his ability and energy. In
+some instances, I see the condition of a tribe is reported as being
+lamentable, from a religious point of view, whilst in a neighbouring
+reservation, it is stated that great progress has been made in the
+establishment of religious teaching and ideas. The Rosebud Agency is
+said to prosper in the hands of one reverend gentlemen; the fathers of
+St. Ignatius are described as doing good work amongst the Flatheads;
+the Pawnees are left without any missionaries at all, and, says
+the government report, "are probably better off without them." And
+depreciatory remarks are slightingly introduced concerning the work at
+other agencies. On the Devil's Lake Agency, the majority of the adults
+shun the missionaries as they would the gentleman who may be supposed
+to own the lake by the sides of which they are encamped. The Jesuit
+fathers and the Catholic sisters are described as working generally
+with zeal and success, whilst one agency assigned to the Methodists
+is said to have no religious agency at all. It is to the success of
+the attempts made to educate the Indians at the public establishments
+that the philanthropist and humanitarian must look with the most
+hopefulness.
+
+All the reports of the teachers and visitors of these schools coincide
+in one point, that the young Indian is most teachable, and that in
+respect of acquiring knowledge he is, if anything, the superior of the
+white, who seems to enjoy no hereditary excellence in his capacity for
+acquiring knowledge. The Bill to which the Report was an introduction
+may be considered indeed as the Magna Charta of the Indian tribes
+if it be followed up by judicious treatment, and careful management
+of and consideration for the rights conferred upon these tribes as
+preliminary to their absorption as citizens in the mass of the nation,
+when they are fit for such an amalgamation with the white races. The
+advance of the United States westwards has left vacant many military
+posts and barracks, stranded, as it were, high and dry in the midst of
+the torrent of civilisation. Fort Bridger, Wyoming; Carlisle Barracks,
+Pennsylvania; Fort Craig, New Mexico; Fort Cummings, in the same
+territory, and a number of others, have been named as suitable for
+the purpose of educating the Indian children; and it was in pursuance
+of the measure recommended to Congress that the various agencies
+throughout the Indian Territories were directed to forward children
+whom their parents might wish to entrust to the officers of the United
+States for education. "Received in the rudest state of savagism," says
+the Report, "their progress is already most remarkable." I have already
+remarked that the health of the boys is not generally satisfactory.
+Their sanitary condition is bad; and it would appear that sometimes in
+these long and tedious journeyings from the remote Indian agencies the
+poor children suffer much.
+
+Even at the present moment the Anglo-Saxon appears to be dealing with
+the Maori in New Zealand very much as he has dealt with the native in
+Tasmania and in Australia. The history of our relations with the New
+Zealand chiefs and people is not in a nature to enable us to throw
+stones at the Americans with impunity, for the glass house in which
+we live can very easily be reached. Some sixteen or seventeen years
+ago a rebellion, arising out of the aggressions of the white settlers
+on the lands of the Maori, was averted by a Proclamation and by Acts
+confiscating a large tract of Tallinassey, which became theoretically
+the property of the Crown. Of course the natives had as little to say
+to that as the lady who is mentioned in 'Tristram Shandy' had with the
+declaration that "she was not related to her own child." But they did
+not recognise the occupancy, and whenever a white man settled upon
+a portion of the ground they pulled down his fences and removed his
+landmarks. The contest is still going on, but no one who is acquainted
+with the history of the colony will doubt what the end will be; and
+it is coming soon, or it is to come, the moment the colonists are bent
+upon taking the land, and when it is desired to do so.
+
+"It but feebly expresses the judgment formed from what we have observed
+to say that we regard the experiment made in this school to educate and
+improve Indian children as in every way a very remarkable success." _Si
+sic omnes!_ Why does not the United States Government, or if not the
+Government, the people, abounding in wealth, full of pious impulses,
+humane, charitable, who justly say that the worst use you can make
+of an Indian is to hang him; why do not the political economists who
+declare that it costs a million of dollars to get rid of an Indian with
+gunpowder and lead; why do not the enterprising and wealthy capitalists
+who desire to appropriate Indian Reservations all combine to extend the
+work of these schools so as to absorb all that remains of the Red Man
+in the rising generation amongst the citizens of the great Republic? A
+blessed work, worthy of an imperial State, truly great and truly good!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+LONDON:
+
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED.
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+_Blue Banner (The); or, The Adventures of a Mussulman, a Christian, and
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+the Prince of Wales. Second Edition. 8vo, 18_s._
+
+_Buckle (Henry Thomas) The Life and Writings of._ ALFRED HENRY HUTH.
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+_Changed Cross (The)_, and other Religious Poems. 16mo, 2_s._ 6_d._
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+25_s._
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+Bombay. 8vo, pp. 420, cloth, 14_s._
+
+_Cripps the Carrier._ 3rd Edition, 6_s._ See BLACKMORE.
+
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+7_s._ 6_d._; plain binding and edges, 5_s._
+
+
+_Dana (R. H.) Two Years before the Mast and Twenty-Four years After._
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+
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+
+_Dictionary (General) of Archæology and Antiquities._ From the French
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+
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+
+_Eighteenth Century Studies._ Essays by F. HITCHMAN. Demy 8vo, 18_s._
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+
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+containing about 200 pp. each.
+
+The following are in the press:---
+
+=Bacon.= Professor FOWLER, Professor of Logic in Oxford.
+
+=Berkeley.= Professor T. H. GREEN, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
+Oxford.
+
+=Hamilton.= Professor MONK, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Dublin.
+[Ready.
+
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+
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+
+=Adam Smith.= J. A. FARRER, M.A., Author of "Primitive Manners and
+Customs." [Ready.
+
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+
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+
+=Austin.= HARRY JOHNSON, B.A., late Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford.
+
+=Hartley.= E. S. BOWEN, B.A., late Scholar of New College, Oxford.
+
+=James Mill.= E. S. BOWEN [Ready.
+
+=Shaftesbury.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+=Hutcheson.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+Arrangements are in progress for volumes on LOCKE, HUME, PALEY, REID,
+&c.
+
+_Episodes of French History._ Edited, with Notes, Genealogical,
+Historical, and other Tables, by GUSTAVE MASSON, B.A.
+
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+ =2. Louis XI. and the Crusades.=
+ =3. Francis I. and Charles V.=
+ =4. Francis I. and the Renaissance.=
+
+The above Series is based upon M. Guizot's "History of France." Each
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+
+_Erema; or, My Father's Sin._ _See_ BLACKMORE.
+
+_Etcher (The)._ Containing 36 Examples of the Original Etched work of
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+ROBERTSON, &c., &c. Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 12_s._
+6_d._
+
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+
+_Evans (C.) Over the Hills and Far Away._ C. EVANS. One Volume, crown
+8vo, cloth extra, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _A Strange Friendship._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
+
+_Eve of Saint Agnes (The)._ JOHN KEATS. Illustrated with Nineteen
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+_Fern Paradise (The): A Plea for the Culture of Ferns._ F. G. HEATH.
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+
+_Fern World (The)._ F. G. HEATH. Illustrated by Twelve Coloured Plates,
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+
+_Few (A) Hints on Proving Wills._ Enlarged Edition, 1_s._
+
+_First Steps in Conversational French Grammar._ F. JULIEN. Being an
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+the same Author. Fcap. 8vo, 128 pp., 1_s._
+
+_Flooding of the Sahara (The)._ _See_ MACKENZIE.
+
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+The following is a List of the Volumes:--
+
+=Denmark and Iceland.= By E. C. OTTE, Author of "Scandinavian History,"
+&c.
+
+=Greece.= By L. SERGEANT, B.A., Knight of the Hellenic Order of the
+Saviour, Author of "New Greece."
+
+=Switzerland.= By W. A. P. COOLIDGE, M.A., Fellow of Magdalen College,
+Editor of _The Alpine Journal_.
+
+=Austria.= By D. KAY, F.R.G.S.
+
+=Russia.= By W. R. MORFILL, M.A., Oriel College, Oxford, Lecturer on
+the Ilchester Foundation, &c.
+
+=Persia.= By Major-Gen. Sir F. J. GOLDSMID, K.C.S.I., Author of
+"Telegraph and Travel," &c.
+
+=Japan.= By S. MOSSMAN, Author of "New Japan," &c.
+
+=Peru.= By CLEMENTS H. MARKHAM, M.A., C.B.
+
+=Canada.= By W. FRASER RAE, Author of "Westward by Rail," &c.
+
+=Sweden and Norway.= By the Rev. F. H. WOODS, M.A., Fellow of St.
+John's College, Oxford.
+
+=The West Indies.= By C. H. EDEN, F.R.G.S., Author of "Frozen Asia," &c.
+
+=New Zealand.=
+
+=France.= By Miss M. ROBERTS, Author of "The Atelier du Lys," "Mdlle.
+Mori," &c.
+
+=Egypt.= By S. LANE POOLE, B.A., Author of "The Life of Edward Lane,"
+&c.
+
+=Spain.= By the Rev. WENTWORTH WEBSTER, M.A., Chaplain at St. Jean de
+Luz.
+
+=Turkey-in-Asia.= By J. C. MCCOAN, M.P.
+
+=Australia.= By J. F. VESEY FITZGERALD, late Premier of New South Wales.
+
+=Holland.= By R. L. POOLE.
+
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+ ---- _Vermont Vale._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Minnie's Mission._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Little Mercy._ 5_s._
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+
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+
+
+_Games of patience._ _See_ CADOGAN.
+
+_Gentle Life_ (Queen Edition). 2 vols, in 1, small 4to, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES.
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+A Reprint (with the exception of "Familiar Words" and "Other People's
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+_The Gentle Life._ Essays in aid of the Formation of Character of
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+
+_About in the World._ Essays by Author of "The Gentle Life."
+
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+
+_Like unto Christ._ A New Translation of Thomas à Kempis' "De
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+_The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected._ the Author of "The
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+
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+
+_Half-Length Portraits._ Short Studies of Notable Persons. By J. HAIN
+FRISWELL.
+
+_Essays on English Writers_, for the Self-improvement of Students in
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+
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+we would certainly suggest the volume before us as a fitting
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+
+_Other People's Windows._ J. HAIN FRISWELL. 3rd Edition.
+
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+
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+
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+
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+6 monthly parts, 2_s._ each.
+
+_Gordon (J. E. H.)._ _See_ "Four Lectures on Electric Induction,"
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+
+_Gouffé. The Royal Cookery Book._ JULES GOUFFÉ; translated and adapted
+for English use by ALPHONSE GOUFFÉ, Head Pastrycook to her Majesty the
+Queen. Illustrated with large plates printed in colours. 161 Woodcuts,
+8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 2_s._
+
+---- Domestic Edition, half-bound, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
+_Great Artists._ _See_ "Biographies."
+
+_Great Historic Galleries of England (The)._ Edited by LORD RONALD
+GOWER, F.S.A., Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery. Illustrated
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+
+_Great Musicians (The)._ A Series of Biographies of the Great
+Musicians. Edited by F. HUEFFER.
+
+ =1. Wagner.= By the EDITOR.
+ =2. Weber.= By Sir JULIUS BENEDICT.
+ =3. Mendelssohn.= By JOSEPH BENNETT.
+ =4. Schubert.= By H. F. FROST.
+ =5. Rossini=, and the Modern Italian School. By H. SUTHERLAND
+ EDWARDS.
+ =6. Marcello.= By ARRIGO BOITO.
+ =7. Purcell.= By H. W. CUMMINGS.
+
+Dr. Hiller and other distinguished writers, both English and Foreign,
+have promised contributions. Each Volume is complete in itself. Small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, 3_s._
+
+_Guizot's History of France._ Translated by ROBERT BLACK. Super-royal
+8vo, very numerous Full-page and other Illustrations. In 8 vols., cloth
+extra, gilt, each 24_s._
+
+"It supplies a want which has long been felt, and ought to be in the
+hands of all students of history."--_Times._
+
+---- ---- _Masson's School Edition._ The History of France from the
+Earliest Times to the Outbreak of the Revolution; abridged from
+the Translation by Robert Black, M.A., with Chronological Index,
+Historical and Genealogical Tables, &c. By Professor GUSTAVE MASSON,
+B.A., Assistant Master at Harrow School. With 24 full-page Portraits,
+and many other Illustrations. 1 vol., demy 8vo, 600 pp., cloth extra,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Guizot's History of England._ In 3 vols. of about 500 pp. each,
+containing 60 to 70 Full-page and other Illustrations, cloth extra,
+gilt, 24_s._ each.
+
+"For luxury of typography, plainness of print, and beauty of
+illustration, these volumes, of which but one has as yet appeared
+in English, will hold their own against any production of an age so
+luxurious as our own in everything, typography not excepted."--_Times._
+
+_Guyon (Mde.) Life._ UPHAM. 6th Edition, crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+
+_Handbook to the Charities of London._ _See_ Low's.
+
+---- _of Embroidery_; _which see_.
+
+---- _to the Principal Schools of England._ _See_ Practical.
+
+_Half-Hours of Blind Man's Holiday; or, Summer and Winter Sketches in
+Black and White._ W. W. FENN, Author of "After Sundown," &c. 2 vols.,
+cr. 8vo, 24_s._
+
+_Hall (W. W.) How to Live Long; or, 1408 Health Maxims, Physical,
+Mental, and Moral._ W. W. HALL, A.M., M.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._
+Second Edition.
+
+_Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates._ _See_ DODGE.
+
+_Harper's Monthly Magazine._ Published Monthly. 160 pages, fully
+Illustrated. 1_s._ With two Serial Novels by celebrated Authors.
+
+"'Harper's Magazine' is so thickly sown with excellent illustrations
+that to count them would be a work of time; not that it is a picture
+magazine, for the engravings illustrate the text after the manner seen
+in some of our choicest _editions de luxe_."--_St. James's Gazette._
+
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+shillingsworth--160 large octavo pages, with over a score of articles,
+and more than three times as many illustrations."--_Edinburgh Daily
+Review._
+
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+
+_Heart of Africa._ Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the
+Unexplored Regions of Central Africa, from 1868 to 1871. By Dr. GEORG
+SCHWEINFURTH. Numerous Illustrations, and large Map. 2 vols., crown
+8vo, cloth, 15_s._
+
+_Heath (Francis George)._ _See_ "Fern World," "Fern Paradise," "Our
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+
+_Heber's (Bishop) Illustrated Edition of Hymns._ With upwards of 100
+beautiful Engravings. Small 4to, handsomely bound, 7_s._ 6_d._ Morocco,
+18_s._ 6_d._ and 21_s._ An entirely New Edition.
+
+_Heir of Kilfinnan (The)._ New Story by W. H. G. KINGSTON, Author of
+"Snow Shoes and Canoes," &c. With Illustrations. Cloth, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_History and Handbook of Photography._ Translated from the French of
+GASTON TISSANDIER. Edited by J. THOMSON. Imperial 16mo, over 300 pages,
+70 Woodcuts, and Specimens of Prints by the best Permanent Processes.
+Second Edition, with an Appendix by the late Mr. HENRY FOX TALBOT.
+Cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+_History of a Crime (The); Deposition of an Eye-witness._ VICTOR HUGO.
+4 vols., crown 8vo, 42_s._ Cheap Edition, 1 vol., 6_s._
+
+---- _Ancient Art._ Translated from the German of JOHN WINCKELMANN, by
+JOHN LODGE, M.D. With very numerous Plates and Illustrations. 2 vols.,
+8vo, 36_s._
+
+---- _England._ _See_ GUIZOT.
+
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+
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+
+---- _Merchant Shipping._ _See_ LINDSAY.
+
+---- _United States._ _See_ BRYANT.
+
+_History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power._ With several
+hundred Illustrations. By ALFRED BARLOW. Royal 8vo, cloth extra, 1_l._
+5_s._ Second Edition.
+
+_How I Crossed Africa: from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, Through
+Unknown Countries; Discovery of the Great Zambesi Affluents, &c._--Vol.
+I., The King's Rifle. Vol. II., The Coillard Family. By Major SERPA
+PINTO. With 24 full-page and 118 half-page and smaller Illustrations,
+13 small Maps, and 1 large one. 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42_s._
+
+_How to Live Long._ _See_ HALL.
+
+_How to get Strong and how to Stay so._ WILLIAM BLAIKIE. A Manual of
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+small post 8vo, 5_s._
+
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+
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+
+---- _See_ "History of a Crime."
+
+_Hundred Greatest Men (The)._ 8 portfolios, 21_s._ each, or 4 vols.,
+half morocco, gilt edges, 12 guineas, containing 15 to 20 Portraits
+each. See below.
+
+"Messrs. SAMPSON LOW & CO. are about to issue an important
+'International' work, entitled, 'THE HUNDRED GREATEST MEN;' being
+the Lives and Portraits of the 100 Greatest Men of History, divided
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+The Introductions to the volumes are to be written by recognized
+authorities on the different subjects, the English contributors being
+DEAN STANLEY, Mr. MATTHEW ARNOLD, Mr. FROUDE, and Professor MAX MÜLLER;
+in Germany, Professor HELMHOLTZ; in France, MM. TAINE and RENAN; and in
+America, Mr. EMERSON. The Portraits are to be Reproductions from fine
+and rare Steel Engravings."--_Academy._
+
+_Hygiene and Public Health (A Treatise on)._ Edited by A. H. BUCK, M.D.
+Illustrated by numerous Wood Engravings. In 2 royal 8vo vols., cloth,
+one guinea each.
+
+_Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer._ _See_ BICKERSTETH.
+
+
+_Illustrated Text-Books of Art-Education._ Edited by EDWARD J. POYNTER,
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+ARCHITECTURE.
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+_Illustrations of China and its People._ J. THOMPSON, F.R.G.S. Four
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+
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+cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Involuntary Voyage (An)._ Showing how a Frenchman who abhorred the
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+
+_Irish Bar._ Comprising Anecdotes, Bon-Mots, and Biographical
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+Barrister-at-Law. Crown 8vo, 12_s._ Second Edition.
+
+_Irish Land Question, and English Public Opinion (The)._ With a
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+
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+
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+
+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+8vo, cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
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+Schiller, with Notes for English Students. By Dr. BUCHHEIM. Small post
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+
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+ =5. The Emperor's New Clothes=, ditto.
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+
+The above in 1 vol., cloth extra, gilt edges, with the whole 36
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+
+_Low's Standard Library of Travel and Adventure._ Crown 8vo, bound
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+
+ =1. The Great Lone Land.= By Major W. F. BUTLER, C.B.
+ =2. The Wild North Land.= By Major W. F. BUTLER, C.B.
+ =3. How I found Livingstone.= By H. M. STANLEY.
+ =4. The Threshold of the Unknown Region.= By C. R. MARKHAM.
+ (4th Edition, with Additional Chapters, 10_s._ 6_d._)
+ =5. A Whaling-Cruise to Baffin's Bay and the Gulf of
+ Boothia.= By A. H. MARKHAM.
+ =6. Campaigning on the Oxus.= By J. A. MACGAHAN.
+ =7. Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.= By MAJOR W. F.
+ BUTLER, C.B.
+ =8. Ocean to Ocean.= By the Rev. GEORGE M. GRANT. With
+ Illustrations.
+ =9. Cruise of the Challenger.= By W. J. J. SPRY, R.N.
+ =10. Schweinfurth's Heart of Africa.= 2 vols., 15_s._
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+ 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Low's Standard Novels._ Crown 8vo, 6_s._ each, cloth extra.
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+ =My Lady Greensleeves.= By HELEN MATHERS, Authoress of
+ "Comin' through the Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &c.
+ =Three Feathers.= By WILLIAM BLACK.
+ =A Daughter of Heth.= 13th Edition. By W. BLACK. With
+ Frontispiece by F. WALKER, A.R.A.
+ =Kilmeny.= A Novel. By W. BLACK.
+ =In Silk Attire.= By W. BLACK.
+ =Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.= By W. BLACK.
+ =History of a Crime=: The Story of the Coup d'Etat. By VICTOR
+ HUGO.
+ =Alice Lorraine.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Lorna Doone.= By R. D. BLACKMORE. 8th Edition.
+ =Cradock Nowell.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Clara Vaughan.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Cripps the Carrier.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Erema; or, My Father's Sin.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Mary Anerley.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Innocent.= By Mrs. OLIPHANT. Eight Illustrations.
+ =Work.= A Story of Experience. By LOUISA M. ALCOTT.
+ Illustrations. _See also_ Rose Library.
+ =The Afghan Knife.= By R. A. STERNDALE, Author of "Seonee."
+ =A French Heiress in her own Chateau.= By the Author of
+ "One Only," "Constantia," &c. Six Illustrations.
+ =Ninety-Three.= By VICTOR HUGO. Numerous Illustrations.
+ =My Wife and I.= By Mrs. BEECHER STOWE.
+ =Wreck of the Grosvenor.= By W. CLARK RUSSELL.
+ =John Holdsworth= (Chief Mate). By W. CLARK RUSSELL.
+ =Elinor Dryden.= By Mrs. MACQUOID.
+ =Diane.= By Mrs. MACQUOID.
+ =Poganuc People, Their Loves and Lives.= By Mrs. BEECHER
+ STOWE.
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+ =A Story of the Dragonnades; or, Asylum Christi.= By the Rev.
+ E. GILLIAT, M.A.
+
+_Low's Handbook to the Charities of London._ Edited and revised to date
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+and its Suburbs," &c. Paper, 1_s._; cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
+
+
+_MacGahan (J. A.) Campaigning on the Oxus, and the Fall of Khiva._
+With Map and numerous Illustrations, 4th Edition, small post 8vo, cloth
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+
+_Macgregor (John) "Rob Roy" on the Baltic._ 3rd Edition, small post
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+
+---- _A Thousand Miles in the "Rob Roy" Canoe._ 11th Edition, small
+post 8vo, 2_s._ 6_d._; cloth, gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Description of the "Rob Roy" Canoe_, with Plans, &c., 1_s._
+
+---- _The Voyage Alone in the Yawl "Rob Roy."_ New Edition; thoroughly
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+
+_Mackenzie (D.) The Flooding of the Sahara._ DONALD MACKENZIE. 8vo,
+cloth extra, with Illustrations, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Macquoid (Mrs.) Elinor Dryden._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 6_s._
+
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+
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+
+_Markham (C. R.) The Threshold of the unknown Region._ Crown 8vo, with
+Four Maps, 4th Edition. Cloth extra, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Maury (Commander) Physical Geography of the Sea, and its Meteorology._
+Being a Reconstruction and Enlargement of his former Work, with Charts
+and Diagrams. New Edition, crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Memoirs of Count Miot de Melito._ 2 vols., demy 8vo, 36_s._
+
+_Memoirs of Madame de Rémusat, 1802-1808._ her Grandson, M. PAUL DE
+RÉMUSAT, Senator. Translated by Mrs. CASHEL HOEY and Mr. JOHN LILLIE.
+4th Edition, cloth extra. This work was written by Madame de Rémusat
+during the time she was living on the most intimate terms with the
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+century. Revelations which have already created a great sensation in
+Paris. 8vo, 2 vols., 32_s._
+
+_Menus (366, one for each day of the year)._ Translated from the French
+of COUNT BRISSE, by Mrs. MATTHEW CLARKE. Crown 8vo, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Men of Mark: a Gallery of Contemporary Portraits of the most Eminent
+Men of the Day taken from Life_, especially for this publication,
+price 1_s._ 6_d._ monthly. Vols. I., II., III., IV., and V., handsomely
+bound, cloth, gilt edges, 25_s._ each.
+
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+
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+
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+
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+pencil for the pocket, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Mountain and Prairie: a Journey from Victoria to Winnipeg, viâ Peace
+River Pass._ the Rev. DANIEL M. GORDON, B.D., Ottawa. Small post 8vo,
+with Maps and Illustrations, cloth extra, 8_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Music._ _See_ "Great Musicians."
+
+_My Lady Greensleeves._ HELEN MATHERS, Authoress of "Comin' through the
+Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &c. 1 vol. edition, crown 8vo, cloth, 6_s._
+
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+
+
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+
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+cloth, 12_s._
+
+---- _What I did and what I saw._ L. M. D'ALBERTIS, Officer of the
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+Maps, Coloured Plates, and numerous very fine Woodcut Illustrations,
+42_s._
+
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+30_s._ Cheaper Edition, 1 vol., crown 8vo, 8_s._ 6_d._
+
+_New Novels._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._ per vol.:--
+
+ =Mary Marston.= By GEORGE MACDONALD. 3 vols. Third Edition.
+ =Sarah de Beranger.= By JEAN INGELOW. 3 vols.
+ =Don John.= By JEAN INGELOW. 3 vols.
+ =Sunrise=: A Story of these Times. By WILLIAM BLACK. 3 vols.
+ =A Sailor's Sweetheart.= By W. CLARK RUSSELL, Author of "The
+ Wreck of the Grosvenor," "John Holdsworth," &c. 3 vols.
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+ 2 vols.
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+ 3 vols.
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+ =The Stillwater Tragedy.= By J. B. ALDRICH.
+ =Prince Fortune and Prince Fatal.= By Mrs. CARRINGTON,
+ Author of "My Cousin Maurice," &c. 3 vols.
+ =An English Squire.= By C. B. COLERIDGE, Author of "Lady
+ Betty," "Hanbury Wills," &c. 3 vols.
+ =Christowell.= By R. D. BLACKMORE. 3 vols.
+ =Mr. Caroli.= By Miss SEGUIN. 3 vols.
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+ =Braes of Yarrow.= By CHAS. GIBBON. 3 vols.
+
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+
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+
+_North American Review (The)._ Monthly, price 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Nothing to Wear; and Two Millions._ W. A. BUTLER. New Edition. Small
+post 8vo, in stiff coloured wrapper, 1_s._
+
+_Nursery Playmates (Prince of)._ 217 Coloured pictures for Children by
+eminent Artists. Folio, in coloured boards, 6_s._
+
+
+_Oberammergau Passion Play._ _See_ "Art in the Mountains."
+
+_O'Brien._ _See_ "Parliamentary History" and "Irish Land Question."
+
+_Old-Fashioned Girl._ _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_On Horseback through Asia Minor._ Capt. FRED BURNABY, Royal Horse
+Guards, Author of "A Ride to Khiva." 2 vols., 8vo, with three Maps and
+Portrait of Author, 6th Edition, 38_s._; Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Our Little Ones in Heaven._ Edited by the Rev. H. ROBBINS. With
+Frontispiece after Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS. Fcap., cloth extra, New
+Edition--the 3rd, with Illustrations, 5_s._
+
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+Steel Engraving, and 12 full-page and 157 smaller Cuts of Figure
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+
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+
+
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+
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+
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+
+---- _Historic Devices, Badges, and War Cries._ 8vo, 1_l._ 1_s._
+
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+Small post 8vo, limp cloth, 5_s._
+
+_Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question (The)._ From 1829
+to 1869, and the Origin and Results of the Ulster Custom. By R. BARRY
+O'BRIEN, Barrister-at-Law, Author of "The Irish Land Question and
+English Public Opinion." 3rd Edition, corrected and revised, with
+additional matter. Post 8vo, cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P., in a Letter to the Author,
+says:-- "I thank you for kindly sending me your work, and I hope that
+the sad and discreditable story which you have told so well in your
+narrative of the Irish Land Question may be useful at a period when we
+have more than ever of reason to desire that it should be thoroughly
+understood."
+
+_Pathways of Palestine: a Descriptive Tour through the Holy Land._
+the Rev. CANON TRISTRAM. Illustrated with 44 permanent Photographs.
+(The Photographs are large, and most perfect Specimens of the Art.)
+Published in 22 Monthly Parts, 4to, in Wrapper, 2_s._ 6_d._ each.
+
+"... The Photographs which illustrate these pages may justly claim, as
+works of art, to be the most admirably executed views which have been
+produced....
+
+"As the writer is on the point of making a fourth visit of exploration
+to the country, any new discoveries which come under observation will
+be at once incorporated in this work."
+
+_Peasant Life in the West of England._ FRANCIS GEORGE HEATH, Author
+of "Sylvan Spring," "The Fern World." Crown 8vo, about 350 pp., 10_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Petites Leçons de Conversation et de Grammaire: Oral and
+Conversational Method; being Lessons introducing the most Useful Topics
+of Conversation, upon an entirely new principle, &c._ F. JULIEN, French
+Master at King Edward the Sixth's School, Birmingham. Author of "The
+Student's French Examiner," "First Steps in Conversational French
+Grammar," which see.
+
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+_Wreck of the Grosvenor._ W. CLARK RUSSELL, Author of "John Holdsworth,
+Chief Mate," "A Sailor's Sweetheart," &c. 6_s._ Third and Cheaper
+Edition.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+ [A] How Mr. Garrett executed his mission and killed the Kid is
+ narrated in the account of the desperados of the West, which
+ forms a separate chapter.
+
+ [B] The day of our departure from the United States, after the
+ visit of which I have been giving the details, was the date
+ of a great crime, of which we were then ignorant. About the
+ very time that we were on our way to the wharf to embark on
+ board the "_City of Berlin_," the murderer of the President
+ was accomplishing his purpose. But with all the means and
+ appliances which exist for the despatch of news, I believe
+ that the commission of the crime was not known till the
+ steamer had passed out to sea from the Sand Heads.
+
+ [C] _See also_ Rose Library.
+
+
+
+
+London:
+
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+
+CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol.
+II (of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II
+(of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II (of 2)
+ A Record of a Ramble in the United States and Canada in
+ the Spring and Summer of 1881
+
+Author: W. H. Russell
+
+Release Date: December 1, 2013 [EBook #44333]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Melissa McDaniel and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have
+ been preserved. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Italic text is denoted by _underscores_. Bold text is denoted by
+ =equals signs=.
+
+ On page 26 Count Fritz Thumb should possibly be Count FritzThumb.
+
+ On page 120 Indianopolis should possibly be Indianapolis.
+
+ On page 124, General How should possibly be General Howe.
+
+ A triangle symbol in the text is represented as [**triangle]
+
+
+
+
+ HESPEROTHEN;
+ NOTES FROM THE WEST:
+ A RECORD OF A
+ RAMBLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
+ IN THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1881.
+
+ BY
+ W. H. RUSSELL, LL.D.
+ BARRISTER-AT-LAW.
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+ LONDON:
+ SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+ CROWN BUILDINGS, 188 FLEET STREET.
+ 1882.
+
+ [All rights reserved.]
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific Page 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber 19
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea-Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!" 44
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Cañon 73
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of
+ Travel--A Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to
+ New York 107
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our Last Day in America 122
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home 140
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great Courtesy to
+ Strangers--Manners and Customs 151
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the Maori
+ 186
+
+
+
+
+HESPEROTHEN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific.
+
+
+_May 30th._--At an hour as to which controversy might arise, owing to
+the changes of time to which we have been subjected, the train, which
+had pulled up but seldom during the night, stopped at Deming Junction,
+where the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad "connects" with
+the Southern Pacific, on which our cars were to be "hauled" to San
+Francisco. Jefferson time and San Francisco time differ two hours, so
+at one end of the station we scored 6 A.M., and at the other 8 A.M.
+The sooner one gets away from Deming in any direction the better. A
+year ago--as is usually the case hereabouts--there was not a trace of
+a town on the dry ugly plain covered with prickly acacias and "Spanish
+bayonets"; now Deming flourishes in gaming and drinking saloons,
+express offices, and all the horrors of "enterprise" in the West. The
+look-out revealed a few tents, wooden shanties, a station, at which
+workmen were running up a frame-house, ground littered with preserved
+provision tins, broken crockery, adobes and refuse of all sorts. At
+the door of one hut, swarming with flies, swung half a carcase of beef;
+two women were washing, pale-faced, but not uncheerful creatures, who
+had not a good opinion of Deming and its population. "They carry out a
+dead man a day, or used to," said one informant. The lady washerwomen
+did not quite corroborate the figure; but, remarked the chattier
+of the two, "there was a considerable shewtin' about last night!"
+To the observation of one of the party that he was "going to have a
+look about," the other lady made reply, "I guess if you dew it will
+be 'hands up' for ten cents with you." On the platform was a United
+States marshal, with a revolver stuck in his belt, but his duties were
+considered to be punitive rather than preventive. Here Mr. Chase and
+Mr. Hawley left us to return to Topeka. At the abschiednehmen Sir H.
+Green was affected by a proof of interest in his welfare of a touching
+character and very full of local colour; one of our friends beckoned
+to him, took him aside, and pulling out a revolver ("It is hands up!"
+thought Sir Henry), fully loaded, pressed it on his acceptance in the
+kindest manner as a useful _compagnon de voyage_. As we were not to
+stay at Deming, the self-sacrifice was not consummated.
+
+The regular train having come up, our special was tacked on to it, and
+in an hour the locomotive puffed out of the depot, and sped westerly
+on its way at the rate of twenty miles an hour, across a plain some
+fifteen miles broad, bordered by jagged, irregular mountain ranges
+north and south, as dry as a bone--so dry that water for the engine
+has to be brought to the stations in tanks. A scanty growth of what
+looked like camel grass, interspersed euphorbias and cactuses of great
+height, was all that met the eye. We are approaching the great basin of
+Arizona, and are warned that much dust and great heat must be expected,
+and that the "scenery" does not improve in point of variety or verdure,
+both of which are nearly at zero. A vigorous, well-directed campaign
+against the flies in the saloon gave us comparative repose; then the
+blinds being pulled down, and the thermometer reduced to 83 deg.,
+society settled itself to study, with results indicated presently by
+a gentle _susurrus_ on the sofas. A sudden alarm, "Look at the deer!"
+There sure enough was a herd of antelopes flying over the scrub towards
+the horizon, which flickered about in the heat in a mirage of islands
+and uplifted mountain ends--so vanished.
+
+After passing Lordsburgh, a desolate spot in the desert, there appeared
+a beautiful mirage. The sand became a sheet of water, waveless and
+mirror-like, and in it we saw reflected in trenchant outline the
+mountain range beyond. "It must be water! it is water!" exclaimed an
+unbelieving director. And, lo! as he spoke the "dust devils" rose and
+danced along the face of the sea; in another minute the vision was
+gone; the dazzling sand, white, blank and dull, mocked our senses.
+This was near Stein's Pass, up which the train of nine carriages
+was climbing--"the heaviest train that has gone over yet," said the
+triumphant conductor. "But we thought we'd try it." Each waggon weighed
+30 tons. The Pass is three miles long, and we were working at a grade
+of 74 feet with a 19-inch cylinder engine.
+
+Between Pyramid Station and San Simon (_stant nomina umbrarum_--the
+names of mere shadows of stations) the western border of New Mexico
+is crossed, and we enter the great Territory of Arizona, which lies
+between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.
+
+It is bounded by New Mexico on the east, by Mexico on the south, by
+Utah and Nevada on the north and north-west, and by California in
+continuation of the western boundary. It is as large as New York,
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware together. Whom it
+belonged to first, so far as occupation constitutes possession, I
+know not; but the Spaniards owned and neglected it for more than
+three centuries before the Americans possessed it. In 1848 and 1853
+the regions now forming Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and
+Nevada were ceded by the descendants of the Spanish conquerors to
+the conquering Anglo-American. It would need weeks of assiduous
+travel to explore the portion of Arizona where the most interesting
+ruins in America, the cities of the Zoltecs or the Aztecs--for the
+experts differ respecting their origin--are to be found. The weight
+of authority and of recent investigation leads one to believe that the
+Aztecs were not the builders of these ruined cities. Humboldt, indeed,
+believed that they were; but, as Mr. Hinton remarks, in his capital
+little handbook, which I recommend to prospectors, emigrants, tourists,
+and travellers, "to suppose such an utter abandonment of settled
+habitations, it will be necessary to suppose some strange impelling
+reasons, either in climate or other causes, that must have amounted
+to a catastrophe. An hypothesis which would leave a whole race able
+to conquer an empire, and to preserve power enough to abandon without
+destruction their old homes, implies conditions and forces without
+a known historical parallel." The conclusion that many native cities
+were flourishing when the Spaniards arrived in America may, perhaps, be
+questioned. There is a distinctive character about them, differing from
+that of the Mississippi mounds, the Central American pyramids, or the
+ruined cities of Yucatan.
+
+The site of one of these cities was pointed out to us from the
+train, and that was all we saw of them. But I heard so much about
+the mysterious remains that I was induced to procure Mr. Bancroft's
+remarkable essay on the native races of the Pacific Coast. Mr. Bancroft
+believes that the Pueblos and other Indians, in a state of civilisation
+which they subsequently lost, were the earliest inhabitants of these
+countries and the builders of the cities; that the Apaches came down
+upon them, and their work being then aided by the Spaniards, this
+original agricultural people were swept off the face of the earth.
+But where the Apaches came from the American ethnologists have not,
+I believe, determined. For hundreds of miles these ruins cover the
+country--stone houses, ancient watch-towers, and adobe buildings,
+around which are quantities of stone implements, masses of crockery and
+pottery. In some places there are structures of wood and stone, without
+iron, the masonry consisting of thin plates of sandstone dressed on the
+edges, and laid in coarse mortar nearly as hard as the stone itself.
+
+The explorers who have discovered the most interesting cities in
+Arizona and elsewhere were officers of the United States army. They
+have been the true pioneers of American civilisation in the West, and
+it is most creditable to them that they have been able to furnish so
+much scientific and antiquarian observation in the execution of their
+arduous and often painful duty in Indian warfare. There is no cold
+shade cast upon the labours of officers who desire to make a little
+reputation for themselves by contributions to scientific publications,
+and by papers on natural history and the like in periodical
+publications or in the daily press.
+
+There is, as might be expected from its position, a very high
+temperature in Arizona. This lasts from the middle of June to the first
+of October. During the best part of summer exertion of any kind is
+impossible. Metal objects cannot be handled without producing blisters;
+rain scarcely ever falls; and, to keep up the drain of constant
+evaporation, a man must drink a gallon or two gallons of water a day.
+Mr. Ross Brown, speaking of the summer, declares that "everything
+dries. Waggons dry; men dry; chickens dry. There is no juice left in
+anything, living or dead, by the close of summer. Officers and soldiers
+creak as they walk; chickens hatched at the season come out of the
+shell ready cooked. Bacon is eaten with a spoon, and butter must stand
+in the sun an hour before the flies become dry enough for use. The
+Indians sit in the river with fresh mud on their heads, and, by dint of
+constant dipping and sprinkling, manage to keep from roasting, though
+they usually come out parboiled." But, although it is recorded that a
+party encamped on a narrow cañon where the temperature was 120 degrees,
+there was no sunstroke. And in that respect the climate differs from
+that on the eastern coast, where, especially this very summer, a great
+number of deaths were caused by _coup de soleil_. People, with the
+thermometer marking 94 degrees, talk of its being agreeably cold. An
+exceedingly interesting fact, if it be one, connected with residence in
+this part of the world is the wholesome effect of complete abstinence.
+Death from want of water was by no means infrequent in the old days
+before so many wells were dug; but it only occurs when there is a good
+deal of humidity in the air. Although alcoholic drinks and tobacco have
+an injurious effect, there is a large consumption of both at all the
+stations and at the mines.
+
+As in the Orange River Free State, where probably the conditions of
+temperature are not very dissimilar, pulmonary complaints are cured, so
+a residence in Arizona, it is said, stops consumption; and there are
+authentic statements that people who arrived in a rapid decline have
+experienced almost immediate relief of the principal symptoms, and have
+been finally cured. Governor Safford, in an official letter, states
+that his lungs were a good deal diseased, and that he was suffering
+with a severe cough when he reached Arizona, and that in six months his
+cough left him. He is satisfied the warm, dry atmosphere acted like a
+healing balm to diseased lungs, and that, the pores being kept open,
+the impurities which attack weak organs escape through the skin. Dr.
+Loryea, of San Francisco, and Dr. Sawyer aver that Arizona is nature's
+Turkish bath, and that Yuma, that evil-looking place, contains the
+fountains of health.
+
+Of such vast regions a small acquaintance acquired by passing rapidly
+twice over a line of railway does not entitle one to speak; but, if
+what we read and heard of Arizona be true, there is within its limits
+enormous mineral and agricultural wealth. There are carboniferous
+basins of great extent and richness. The mountains teem with ore.
+Silver and gold, copper pyrites, zinc, and lead are to be found over
+a great range, the extent of which is as yet imperfectly known. There
+are sulphates of nearly all the metals; metallic oxides, chlorides,
+carbonates, nitrates; agates, amethysts, garnets, and other precious
+stones. People there are who believe that the diamond, the emerald, and
+the ruby will turn up in due time. In fact, if one were to be guided
+by the accounts in the papers or the guide-books, he would think that
+a sure way of making an immediate fortune would be to settle down on
+any hillside in this favourite land. Nevertheless, what I saw out of my
+window gave me reason to suppose that there was poverty in Arizona as
+well as in the old country. Nor did the buildings which I saw by the
+way at the sparse stations and infrequent towns give an idea that the
+in-dwellers were well-to-do in the world. The adobe, or burnt brick,
+which is a common material in lieu of better, has always a ruinous
+appearance. The houses built of it yesterday seem tumbling to pieces
+from the influences of old age.
+
+We take no note of time save by its relation to constant motion, and
+to the "programme"--a Procrustean bed on which we have voluntarily
+placed our tortured limbs. Sometimes in the hours of the night, which
+could not be called still because of the incessant pealing, rattling,
+and thundering of the train, I thought of the wonderful ways of man
+with himself in such affairs as we were now engaged in. There is a play
+of Terence which was a trouble to me in my youth, so long ago that I
+remember very little more of it than the dismal and elongated name;
+but Mr. "Heautontimorumenos" never needlessly bound himself up in a
+programme and delivered his life over to a time-table! It is likely
+enough, seeing what sort of man he was, that he would have adopted
+that course had he lived in these days. I admit that programmes are
+necessary when your movements regulate, or have to be regulated by,
+those of other people; and that was the case in some measure with
+us, but the solicitude it occasioned the worthy and valued friends,
+whose brows I perceived becoming more puckered, and whose faces and
+spirits were heavy with cares connected with the programme, to come up
+to time, was beyond belief, and I vowed if ever I had my own way with
+the ordering of a party I would have no programme at all. And plot and
+calculate as you will, a gale of wind, or a heated axle, or a broken
+bridge, or a flood, upsets everything, and your schemes gang aglee
+utterly! It was admirable to see how we were working out the destiny
+we had made manifest for ourselves in advance so long ago, but the task
+was not easy. What curious sounds, by the way, our train made at night!
+One could now and then compose words to the tune of the wheels, and
+the regular rhythm forced one at times to hum the words of a song, of
+which the train seemed to hammer out the music. It seemed so strange to
+be turning into bed night after night, and waking up to pass the same
+life day after day, like a log of wood carried on by an interminable,
+irresistible torrent.
+
+Provided with books and newspapers, and friends to converse with, as
+well as with sights to see, we had, however, no reason to complain
+that time hung heavy on our hands as the train sped on. The books
+were very utilitarian, it is true--Reports of Chambers of Commerce,
+statistics and papers connected with railway and commercial enterprise
+and the like. But our directors took to that literature with avidity,
+and aided by maps and tables, copiously furnished to them, seemed
+bent on passing with honours in a competitive examination anent the
+American railway system. There were always, close at hand in the cars,
+competent authorities to answer questions, or able champions to engage
+in controversy, and as I heard all the subtle contentions, which I did
+not understand, concerning signalling and baggage checking, gauges and
+engines, curves and gradients, freights and fares, I was set to think
+what the field had been in which all the ingenuity and talent displayed
+in dealing with such topics were exercised in pre-railway days. These
+discussions were mostly connected with the consideration of profits
+and percentages, and that was a neutral ground on which the combatants
+manoeuvred their facts and figures as in a natural "_schauplatz_".
+There were times when such investigations ran down like a clock,
+and no one wound them up again for a few hours, and then my friends
+digested the remains they found on the field of battle and strengthened
+themselves for friendly jousting.
+
+Not very long ago there would have been exceedingly good sporting in
+many parts of Arizona. Grizzly bears, common and black bears; pumas,
+mountain sheep, jaguars, ocelots, opossums, panthers, wolves, and
+lynxes are largely distributed over the hill ranges. There are also
+hares and rabbits and many smaller animals. Wild turkeys have much
+diminished of late years; but there is a variety of birds, some of
+them excellent for the spit. The chase, however, is attended with some
+danger, unless one is very well booted and looks out where he treads,
+as rattle-snakes abound, and are of exceeding virulence, the black
+species being especially deadly. There are horned toads, but these are
+harmless.
+
+For the botanist Arizona is an almost inexhaustible field of
+delight. Any one who likes to read of vegetable wonders, or of an
+extraordinarily varied flora, cannot do better than get Dr. Loryea's
+work, or read 'New Mexico,' by Elias Brevoort. The growth which struck
+us most was that of the extraordinary cactus called the candelabra
+or Sahuaro. It is worth while going so far as the railway will take
+one to see these plants sticking up on the sides of a rock without a
+trace of verdure or moisture, rising to the height of 40 or 50 feet,
+and throwing out enormous arms at the most grotesque angles, each
+varying from the other in shape, the number of its arms, and in the
+manner in which they are disposed. This giant cactus is covered with
+prickles, and is of a light green colour. It is said that in the old
+days the Apache Indians not unfrequently made use of them as handy
+means of torture, and nailed their victims to a cactus previous to
+setting fire to it. The body of the plant is resinous, and it can
+be easily converted into a bonfire. Here and there we saw some with
+traces of pale yellow flowers. When these are gone there is a fruit,
+which makes an excellent preserve, or can be boiled into sugar. Then
+there are prickly pears in great quantities; and there is a "negro-head
+cactus," with a round top covered with sharp spines, which furnished
+the Mexicans with fish-hooks. "There is a soul of beauty in things
+evil." If a thirsty traveller coming upon one of these plants kindles
+a fire around it, the juices of its body are gradually concentrated
+into a central cavity, where they only wait incision to be liberated
+in the form of a pleasant drink, half a gallon or more in quantity.
+The appliances for getting a drink out of most of these roots are
+described at length in various books of travel; but however useful they
+may have been at the time, the activity of the Atchison, Topeka and
+Santa Fé Railway will in all probability exempt travellers in future
+from any necessity to avail themselves of these ingenious devices.
+Trees flourish in spite of the heat and want of water. As various as
+the trees are the human inhabitants, and one of the greatest marvels
+connected with them, perhaps, is the extraordinary variety of dialects
+amongst people of the same race, who lived in the same country long
+before the white man came to trouble them. They are decreasing, of
+course, in numbers; but in some of the reservations they seem to
+have arrested downward progress, and to have taken to some form of
+agricultural labour. At present Arizona is the happy hunting-ground
+of the unfortunate red man. There is, I am assured, no disposition on
+the part of the whites to intrude upon the reservations of the various
+tribes. I did not hear of any one who had come in from the East to
+settle with the view of making his fortune by farming; but miners have
+flooded the cañons, and climbed the mountain-tops; and now they have
+settled down into a steady way of life without any big "booms," as the
+Americans say, but with prospects of pretty certain returns for their
+labour.
+
+All night we travelled on, and when the morning came, we were still
+traversing the desert, still passing through one of the most sterile
+wastes on the face of the earth, where, however, by strange contrasts
+of nature--or is it strange?--there were in the mountains and in the
+ravines rich ores to tempt the cupidity and enterprize of man. We are
+continually reminded of similar wastes in India and in Africa; but no
+one, as far as I know, has yet discovered any mineral wealth in the
+north-western deserts of our Indian Empire. And although Captain Burton
+and others have fancied they have come across an El Dorado in Southern
+Egypt, and Ibrahim Pasha had such faith in the existence of gold in
+those regions that he led forth an expedition to perish there, there
+is no such fortune in store for the adventurous miner as awaits him in
+Arizona, Colorado, and California.
+
+_June 1st._--Everyone who has entered Arizona, or left it--and let us
+hope he went back all the better for his visit--will recollect Yuma for
+ever.
+
+Yuma is on the Colorado, which divides California from Arizona.
+The muddy waters of the river rush with immense velocity past the
+buttresses of the fine bridge, with a draw for steamers, that spans
+it. The town consists apparently of adobe houses, and these not very
+regularly built. I could not visit the main street for lack of time,
+but the offshoots within eyeshot of us were not tempting. All we
+could see from the railway windows were flat-roofed adobe houses, some
+squalid Indians nearly naked, the buildings, with the Stars and Stripes
+over them, of the United States post on the left bank, and a few wooden
+sheds. It is said to be one of the hottest places in the world, and
+certainly looked dry and dusty. They say that a soldier who died there
+and went to an unmentionable place, returned in the spirit to beg for
+a blanket, as he felt so cold!
+
+More happily constituted travellers than most of us have seen something
+pleasing in the aspect of the country roundabout, and have been moved
+to much admiration by the various tints of the hills in the distance,
+and by the rocks which constitute the near limits of the valley through
+which the river passes. In the old days, when the stage-coaches offered
+the only means of travelling through the district, there might have
+been a good deal to see along the road; but the rail generally avoids
+sights, and where nature is at its best, the engineer strikes deep down
+and burrows if he can. The colours of the hills are bright and varied;
+the lava rocks are of many shades, and the sun, piercing through strata
+of pure air, illuminates them with great vividness and force; but after
+a time the eye tires of the uniform hues of the landscape. For a few
+miles the rail runs close to the river, then plunges into the most
+remorseless, cruel waste of sand and rock, spread out up to the foot of
+the rugged hills of the Barnardino Range, I ever beheld--an abomination
+of desolation compared with which the Libyan Desert or the plains of
+Scinde were the Garden of the Hesperides. I cannot describe, nor could
+I at any time hope to succeed in giving an adequate conception of this
+dreadful wilderness. For 107 miles west there is not a drop of water to
+be found; the stations are dependent on the railway for their supplies.
+But Nature, as if to take away the reproach of permitting such a vast
+blotch on her fair face, kindly threw in Fata Morgana. We saw with
+delight widespread lakes with fairy islands in the midst; placid seas
+washing the base of the distant hills. This baked and dreary expanse
+extends nearly to San Gorgonio. We were spared the sandstorms which are
+so dreadful, nor did we experience inconvenience from the dust. The
+traveller, who has begun to despair of ever seeing anything greener
+than giant cacti and the adamantine vegetation which dispenses with
+water, is agreeably surprised as he approaches Los Angeles. If he
+be as fortunate as we were in having such friends as Colonel Baker
+and his wife to take charge of him, he will be amply repaid for far
+greater discomforts than any he experienced in the Colorado desert.
+From Los Angeles there is a railway to Santa Monica, seventeen miles
+distant, which belongs to Colonel Baker; and I would advise every one
+who can, either to spare or make the time for a diversion to that
+most delightful spot. Judge of the pleasure we felt when, after a
+picturesque run through orange groves, vineyards, and fields of corn
+and barley, we gazed on the waters of the Pacific--"[Greek: thalatta!
+thalatta!]" What a glorious scene! the broad bay lighted by the rays
+of the declining sun; the blue waves rolling on in solemn march,
+and breaking in long lines of foam on the dazzling sand, and nearer
+still the gardens and trees of the Pacific Biarritz which was about
+to welcome us! Our palace-car and its attendant carriages shot into a
+siding close to the beach. In a few minutes "every man Jack" was off to
+the bathing establishment to conform to the regulations ere we plunged
+into the sea. It is an orthodox bathing-place of the highest order. The
+Baths are extensive, and provided with every convenience and comfort
+for ladies and invalids; hot and cold, salt water and fresh, for those
+who do not like to trust themselves to the sea. A rope extended seaward
+to hold on by was needful, for the surf was heavy and the undertow
+strong. The water was delicious. Generally there is less sea on, and it
+is never too hot or too cold for bathing. Next morning we had another
+bath in a still rougher Pacific. The Duke and some of the party were
+driven about the country by Colonel and Mrs. Baker, and at 3 P.M., to
+our sorrow, we left the most lovable little spot of all we have seen
+on this continent. Good fortune be in store for Santa Monica! At Los
+Angeles, where carriages were waiting, we drove through the streets and
+suburbs, which enabled us to appreciate the reasons which induced the
+Spanish founders to give the city its name. In the evening we continued
+our journey, passing in the dark over the feat of engineering called
+the Loop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber.
+
+
+_June 2nd._--It is astonishing how soon one gets accustomed to the
+rattle and rumble of the rail, and sleeps all the night through after
+a time, waking up only when a train stops at a station, just as a
+miller is roused by the cessation of the clock of the mill-wheel. We
+keep good hours, and so at 4.30 this morning I was looking out of the
+window at a sea of blue mountain ridges upon the west, which looked
+like the waves of the ocean, so varied in the serrated edges was the
+line of stony waves which seemed as if they were about to sweep down
+over the great stretch of prairie. We were passing through a new land
+of Goshen, at least that was the name which I detected on the station
+board, indicating a junction with another line, and early as was the
+hour the door of the hospitable restaurant was open, and gentlemen
+in front were to be seen drawing their hands across their lips as if
+they had been taking a refresher in the early morning. Close at hand
+the country was perfectly flat, covered with glorious crops nearly
+ripe for the sickle, and indeed cut and stacked in some places. Water
+appeared abundant; a river flowing west was visible at intervals, its
+course marked by a line of trees. Large black cranes stalked about in
+the meadow-like fields, and hares sat up on end to take a look at the
+train. The paucity of human beings, except at the rare stations, was
+remarkable; only when I say "rare," perhaps I am scarcely justified,
+as there were little wooden huts at intervals perhaps of ten or twelve
+miles, where a saloon announced itself, and a possible ticket-office.
+
+On the east of the plain through which the line runs, the peaks of
+the Sierra Nevada were visible, but the journey was rather monotonous
+all the same, and we were glad when our train halted at Madera, about
+ninety miles from Goshen, where we were to get out and start on our
+expedition to the Yosemite Valley. Especial arrangements had been
+made for our conveyance, but I almost doubt now whether it would not
+have been better for us to have taken the ordinary carriage which
+leaves Madera every day, except Monday, for the Yosemite Valley, at
+7.45, arriving at Clarke's or Bruce's in somewhat less than twelve
+hours, so as to bring daylight with it to the halting-place; a very
+desirable thing, as we soon found out. It was 8 o'clock before our
+party started from Madera, in two Kendal carriages with four horses
+each. In one was the Duke, Lady Green, Mr. Stephen, and myself, with
+Crockett on the box; in another were Sir Henry Green, Mr. Wright, Major
+Anderson, and Mr. Jerome. Our driver was a man with the impossible
+name of MacLenathan, a resolute, dry, taciturn man, with a good face,
+seamed with the exposure to sun and rain of many years on the box.
+But he told us he had deserted it lately, and had taken to the work
+of livery stable keeper, only coming out on this occasion as driver to
+do honour to the Duke. As it turned out, it was well his right and his
+left hand had not lost their cunning. The driver of the other carriage
+was a noted character, rejoicing in the name of "Buffalo Bill," and
+later on we had reason to feel very thankful to him also for the
+possession of great pluck and nerve. For some ten or twelve miles the
+route, which consists of mere wheel tracks over the prairie, runs over
+moderately undulating land. On the right there is a shoot or _flume_
+for carrying down timber from the upper part of the mountain ridge
+fifty miles away. The dust was troublesome, and the rapid motion of
+the four horses scarcely saved us from the roasting sun. The scenery
+was not interesting; indeed, the great object of attraction was the
+little Californian quail with his pretty crest, running across through
+the grass or jumping up upon a stump to have a look at the travellers.
+Stage stables were far apart, but the speed was fair, and it was
+astonishing to see the excellent condition in which the horses were
+at the end of their long canter, and what capital steeds were taken
+out of the stalls, in which they were feeding on barley-straw, to
+be put into the traces. I think the average length of the stages was
+about twelve miles. We lost about an hour at a little mining village
+where we halted for dinner, a place called Coarse Gold, as well as
+I recollect, consisting of the usual buildings, a few shanties, the
+store, the hotel, far better than might have been expected, and a sort
+of wigwam or one-storeyed house, in front of which were assembled a
+number of "Digger Indians," degraded specimens of a degraded tribe.
+They sat looking at the new arrivals in the most apathetic manner,
+just as they might regard so many flies. The men were dressed in a
+compromise of old Indian attire, leather leggings and deerskin jackets,
+with European clothing, caps, bad hats and trousers, and old boots,
+the women swathed ungracefully in what seemed to be pieces of blanket,
+their legs encased in folds of dirty cotton. One of these Diggers was
+very slightly dressed, and as it is intensely cold in the winter, we
+asked him whether he did not feel the effect of the frost and snow.
+He knew a little English, and made the most of it. "When your body is
+covered you do not feel the cold," he said; "But your face is always
+uncovered, and yet you do not feel the cold there. An Indian's body is
+all face." And that was all the explanation he would vouchsafe to us.
+Somehow or another, what with delays at the stations, possibly caused
+by our being out of the regular running, and being an interpolation on
+the ordinary course of travel, and possibly owing to our reduced speed,
+for the carriages with four horses did not, it seems, go as fast as
+the public conveyance with six, it was getting dark as we approached
+the line of wooded hills, in a valley in which, many miles away, lay
+our halting-place for the night. The result of our delay in starting,
+concerning which the driver had been severe from time to time, was
+startlingly manifest as the coaches mounted the steep ascents of one of
+the most tortuous roads in the world. The spurs of the hills come down
+very sharply to the valley, and the road is carried round by a series
+of very severe gradients following the contour of the mountain-chain,
+so that at one time there is a deep gorge on your left, and then, as
+the road leaves that spur with the valley on that side and crosses to
+another spur, there is a great descent on the right, so that you are
+continually passing along by a series of precipices, to which, in our
+case, the fast gathering gloom imparted additional horror. Through the
+sighing of the wind in the trees aloft came the roar of the torrents
+down below. The drivers went along at a good steady canter, and from
+time to time, as we came round a sharp curve, I dare say the thought
+was in every one's mind, what would happen if one of the leaders
+fell, or if the driver slipped his hand in gathering up the reins to
+go round the corner. The scenery became more wild and formidable, so
+to speak, at every fresh turn. The colossal trees, which challenged
+admiration in the daytime, closed up in greater volume, darkening the
+narrow road completely, so that in an hour after entering upon the
+mountain-range it became as black as pitch. The lamps of Buffalo Bill
+in the leading carriage were some guide to our driver. He had none,
+and it was with anxiety, renewed every ten minutes or so, that we saw
+the lights in front describe a graceful curve, which showed that they
+were passing by one of the dips or cuts of the road. It needed skill
+and judgment for MacLenathan to conduct the carriage, because if he
+drove too close to that in front of us, the clouds of dust obscured
+the view, and if he dropped too far behind he lost the benefit of the
+lights. By enormous trunks of trees, by piles of timber, through deep
+cuttings in the rock, plashing over watercourses, descending swiftly
+into river-beds, and splashing through the fords over boulders, then
+climbing up steep hillsides, on and on, it seemed as though the night
+would never come to an end, and we inwardly, and audibly too, expressed
+our regret that we had not started a little earlier; but still there
+was an almost pleasurable excitement in holding on as we swept round
+one of these terrible gorges, and tried to look down into the gulf
+beneath. That last stage seemed interminable, but towards 9 o'clock at
+night the driver of the coach in front announced that we were getting
+"near at last"; and lucky it was, for his lights were giving out. "It
+is just as well that they did not," said our driver, "because it would
+be bad for you." "Why?" "Well," he said, "you would just have to get
+out and walk! I would not undertake to drive any one in the dark along
+such a road as this." Presently we heard the noise of rushing water,
+and gained the bank of a stream flowing with swiftness over a shingle
+bed. This we crossed, and in half an hour more, through the dark belt
+of trees in front, lights were discerned, and, crossing another stream
+and a bridge, our wearied horses were pulled up in front of the hotel,
+a large wooden building, on the steps of which were the landlord and
+his staff, and most of the inmates turned out to greet and inspect
+the travellers who had been long expected. "It is a bad country to go
+driving about in the dark," said Mr. Bruce, the landlord, a sentiment
+in which we thoroughly agreed. There was a supper in the common
+room, to which, albeit the fare was primitive enough, we did ample
+justice. Travellers have complained of the charges along the road, but,
+considering the distance which all articles have to be carried to the
+Valley, the heavy duties, and the shortness of the season, I do not
+think that any one with experience of Swiss inns would complain much;
+and if the traveller desires to drink claret, he must not be astonished
+if he pays eight or nine shillings a bottle for it. The ordinary fare,
+at hotel prices, is quite good enough for hungry people, and eggs,
+milk, and bread are abundant, and not dear. The bedrooms, sufficiently
+simple in all their appointments, are good enough to be welcome to
+tired people, for there is a fair bed to lie upon, and the sheets, as
+far as our experience went, were clean and fresh. Nor were the insect
+horrors, of which we may have some knowledge in parts of Europe, to be
+dreaded, not even mosquitoes at this time of year.
+
+Soon after dawn a thunderstorm broke over the valley, hail and torrents
+of rain, and the landlord congratulated us upon the cooling effect
+it would have on the air, and on the absence of dust, which is rather
+troublesome at times. It was necessary to make an early start in the
+morning, for it is a long journey to the Yosemite. For some years past
+the Valley has become a kind of American Chamouni, and if Americans
+swarm over Europe in search of the sublime and beautiful, they cannot
+be accused of neglecting altogether their own country. The first thing
+I saw, on walking out on the verandah of the hotel, was the stage-coach
+and six horses, with eight ladies and nine gentlemen, loading up for
+the Valley. They had arrived late the night before, a little in advance
+of us, and yet the ladies, bravely attired for the road, were all in
+their place in the _char à bancs_ long before 7. Travellers frequently
+stay at Bruce's, and our host promises good sport to any one who will
+make it his headquarters; but I cannot speak with any confidence on
+that point myself; still I should think it a very pleasant quarter for
+a man who had nothing else to do, and who had an aptitude for climbing,
+to go about looking out big game. We heard talk of pheasants, but
+saw none: the bird which is called by that name not being entitled
+to it, according to ornithologists. In front of the hotel was laid
+out the skin of a cinnamon bear, which had been shot by an Austrian
+gentleman--"Count Fritz Thumb," the landlord called him--a few days
+previously, and which was to be sent after him as a trophy of his
+skill. "But," says Boniface, "it was not he shot him at all; it was 'is
+old Injun hunter." Grizzlies, he said, were rare, but they were to be
+found if you went up high enough, and as he spoke he pointed up to the
+mountains towering away in the distance in grand Alpine proportions.
+Deer were common enough, and there were some tame specimens of the
+ordinary black deer running about in the enclosure. We had an early
+start, but not quite so early as the Americans; and it was wonderful
+how well our four hardy horses did the first stage, six and twenty
+miles, including some very sharp ascents from the Hotel.
+
+From time to time we got out and walked up the sharp bits, diverging
+to the right or left to gather the lovely flowers which grew on
+the roadside, or halting to admire the giant trees which clothed
+the mountain ridges. Pitiable ignorance! not to know the names of
+the plants or shrubs or wonderful bunches of blossoms, among which
+fluttered the most magnificently coloured butterflies. Woodpeckers
+of many different species uttered their quaint notes in jerky flight
+from tree to tree, or peered at the travellers from the shelter of
+the branches. Firs, pines, and spruces of enormous size, and trees
+to me unknown, formed a dense forest on each side of the road; but
+now and then we caught glimpses of the stupendous ranges of the alps
+beyond. It was lamentable to see the waste and wreck wrought in this
+wondrous wealth of timber--reckless, wicked waste. Charred trunks
+stood with leafless arms withered and black, or lay prone among the
+ferns in myriads. This was, we were told, the work of shepherds, who
+think nothing of setting fire to one of the finest trees in the world
+to warm themselves for an hour, and are delighted with a conflagration
+which may lay a hillside in ashes. And the Indians too are held to
+have their share in the destruction. There was enough of timber wasted
+and destroyed mile after mile to build a city. The nemesis must come;
+already the alarm has been sounded, and the State authorities here and
+elsewhere are trying to prevent the mischief. I have often had occasion
+to regret my ignorance of botany _inter alia_; but never did I feel it
+more than when I was walking up the road, on each side of which was a
+carpet of flowers, a maze of shrubs and plants--dense brushwood--to not
+one of which could I give a name. We arrived at the Halfway House at
+12.35 as much pleased as the horses which brought us there so well at
+the respite, for it was an awful "pull up," and the coachman did his
+work at high pressure. In the course of our pilgrimage we had found a
+very pleasant _divertissement_. The Major, Mr. White, and Mr. Jerome
+had excellent voices, and from time to time they burst into song,
+giving with great effect the quaint negro melodies, which are now made
+familiar to us in London, from a very large _répertoire_; and so the
+afternoon passed in quiet enjoyment as we climbed the hills on foot or
+in the carriages--snatches of talk, exclamations of wonder and delight,
+and outbursts of the 'Golden Slipper,' 'O! that 'Possum,' 'The Ark,'
+'John Brown,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' and other choruses.
+
+It was near 4 o'clock when the driver, who had been silent for some
+time, looking round at us occasionally as one who would say, "Wait a
+little till I surprise you," suddenly pulling up, said, "Now, here you
+are. This is Fascination Point! Won't you get down a bit?" And, lo!
+there indeed lay before us a scene of indescribable grandeur. I know
+nothing like the effect produced by Yosemite Valley when seen for the
+first time from this point. It has a characteristic which no other
+similar view I am acquainted with possesses. You take in at one glance
+stupendous mountain-ranges, all but perpendicular, beyond which you see
+the snowy crests of the great Sierra, the profound valley between them,
+a long vista of extraordinary magnificence, of cascades and precipitous
+waterfalls, and far down below a silvery river rushing through a
+forest composed of the noblest trees in the world, with patches of
+emerald-green sward and bright meadows.
+
+I see that by a slip of the pen I have miscalled the place from which
+we got our first view of the wondrous scene. But I have a right to
+change the name for my own use. What the driver said was "Inspiration
+Point." I prefer my mistake, for the view inspires you with no feeling
+save that of wonder and delight. These sublime scenes appear to be
+beyond the reach of poetry. Niagara and the Yosemite have not yet
+found a laureate. The peculiar and unique feature of the valley seems
+to me to be the height and boldness of the cliffs which spring out
+from the mountain-sides like sentinels to watch and ward over the
+secrets of the gorge; next to that is the number and height of the
+waterfalls; but it is only by degrees and by comparison that the mind
+takes in the fact that the cliffs are not hundreds, but thousands
+of feet high--that these bright, flashing, fleecy cataracts fall for
+thousands of feet--that the rent which has been torn in the heart of
+the mountains, till it is closed by the awful granite portals beyond
+which no mortal may pass, extends for miles. I thought as I gazed
+that it were pity to descend, lest a nearer view might destroy the
+effect of that _coup d'oeil_; but the driver had regulated the period
+for rapture. He whipped us up to our places by word of mouth, and
+the carriages renewed their course, now striking by bold zigzags down
+into the valley for our destination, which was still six miles away. I
+shall not attempt to describe my own feelings, far less can I pretend
+to tell what others, probably far more susceptible of the beauty and
+grandeur of what we beheld than I am, may have felt at the succession
+of the awe-inspiring revelations of the tremendous grandeur of the
+Valley which came upon us. What is the use of rolling off a catalogue
+of names and figures?--even the brush of the painter, charged with
+the truest colours and guided by the finest hand and eye, could never
+do justice--that is, could never give a just idea of these cliffs and
+waterfalls. "El Capitan! Oh, that's the name, is it? Three thousand
+three hundred feet high!" And then you try to take in what that means.
+"And it's 3500 feet down to the Valley? Dear me!" "And that is the
+Cathedral Rock? And those two peaks are the Spires? I don't exactly see
+the resemblance; do you?"
+
+There was a sort of wail of delight from us all as we came on the
+"Bridal Veil Fall"; and I do not think any one cared to know that it
+was just 60 short of 1000 feet high! Surely one of the most graceful,
+lovely _chutes d'eau_ on earth, lost though it be from view behind the
+rocks at the close of its feathery flight! But there was no stopping to
+look at anything; relentless Fate drove us down and on, till the wheels
+rolled more evenly, and at last we came to the bed of the valley--some
+1800 yards broad, opening out here and there yet wider--and we
+rejoiced in the sight of the bright clear water of the Merced, child
+of innumerable icy mothers, flashing, sparkling, dashing and brawling,
+like a myriad Lodores, between her banks decked with flowers and
+covered with forest trees.
+
+Suddenly there dashed out of a glade two cavaliers, and made full tilt
+at the leading carriage. "To arms!" Not a bit of it! Nor banditti
+or Injuns--of whom we had met one or two riding sullenly along to
+the hunting-grounds--no, only two hotel touts armed with cards of
+self-commendation, and not apparently in much rivalry, for when told
+that we had engaged our hotel, they galloped off to waylay other
+travellers, of whose coming they were apprized by our driver. Our
+hotel, I may say by the way, gave us full contentment. The site was
+admirable, commanding a full and near view of _the_ Fall of Falls--the
+Yosemite--which had so fascinated our eyes that we could scarce divert
+them to any other object--not "Widow's Tears," or "Virgin's Tears,"
+nor the "Three Brothers," not anything but the Yosemite! And so, when
+our rooms were pointed out, we made off to the spot where the fine
+cloudlike vapour rising above the tree-tops indicated the basin into
+which the waters sought rest after their troubled leap.
+
+Our way lay through the usual gathering of stores, hotels, livery
+stables for the horses and ponies needed for the excursions, and
+curiosity dealers' shops, to the village street, as it may be termed,
+shadowed by fine trees, under which reposed some Indians--one of whom,
+an Amazon in yellow toga, went riding full gallop past us, her hair
+falling in a black mat on her shoulders, sitting low, in Melton style,
+regardless of poultry, children, and boulders, and vanishing in a cloud
+of dust under the trees. Then we turned to the left and crossed the
+river by a rustic bridge; and as I looked down into the dancing waters
+certain shadow-like objects flew up against the current. "Trout?"
+asked I. "Yes, they're trout. They take 'em--when they dew--five
+pounds weight. The Injuns catch 'em. We don't understand it as well."
+A short walk, with eyes ever up-turned, and we come out to a moraine,
+and, clambering up over a mass of trunks of trees and decaying timber,
+_the_ Falls were before us--I cannot write more--no adjective will do.
+"Two thousand six hundred and thirty-four feet, mind!" says the voice.
+"I don't care," thought we, "it's the most beautiful and wonderful
+water-jump ever seen by human eye." "It only remains," as they say, to
+state that there is first, falling over a sheet of granite straight as
+a wall, a considerable river, which in the plunge comes down at once
+1600 feet. There, in a basin of rock, it collects its scattered forces,
+under cover of eternal spray and cloud, and then takes another header
+of 434 feet to a barrier of granite, against which it rages for a mad
+moment, till it swells over and escapes from control by another spring
+of 600 feet sheer down--and now it is free, and rushes past at our
+feet, a joyous flashing stream.
+
+We returned through the meadows from the Falls, and as I was walking
+in advance of the party a snake wriggled across the path, which I
+struck at instinctively with my stick, and was lucky enough to kill
+at the first blow. I exhibited the carcass, or whatever a snake's
+dead body may be, in triumph to my companions. Further on our way we
+fell in with an old Frenchman who was carrying a basket of fruit from
+his little garden to the inn. With all the courtesy of his country,
+he offered to Lady Green the choicest in his little _corbeille_. He
+came from Lorraine very long ago to prospect in the States, almost the
+earliest of the pioneers, but he was still strong and active, and he
+pointed with great satisfaction up to a white flag planted on a dizzy
+height above, which he said he had placed with his own hands. The chief
+livery stable keeper is a German named Stegman. The first ascent of the
+Dome was made by a young Scotchman named Anderson, from Montrose; so
+with Indians, Americans, Mexicans, Europeans, there is a very liberal
+representation of the nations of the world, in the season, in the
+valley. Mr. Hutchinson, the Conservator of the Valley--one with all
+the enthusiasm of the American character in everything pertaining to
+the country, aggravated in this instance by an intense admiration for
+the valley over which he is appointed to watch--joined us at dinner in
+the little inn. Full of information, bubbling over with anecdote and
+illustration, and replete with all kinds of knowledge concentrated upon
+the one object--the Valley--the Valley--and nothing but the Valley.
+He knows its history since the time it was first discovered, and its
+natural history and geological formation, and all about the Indians who
+lived there and their traditions. It so happened that the Commissioners
+of the State of California, who are bound to visit the public
+domains, were also at the hotel, and so we had quite an unofficial and
+ceremonious meeting; and presently, as we stood in front of the hotel
+gazing up on the peaks, lighted up by the stars, and listening to the
+thunder of the waterfall, a startling report burst out on the night,
+and in another instant the echoes repeated from rock to rock were
+crashing through the Valley with the roar of heaven's artillery. It
+was the first gun of a salute ordered by the Commissioners to be fired
+in honour of the Duke's arrival. The effect was very fine, but I doubt
+whether I did not feel full of resentment at the outburst, very much as
+the owls and night-hawks might have been expected to feel, if one could
+judge from their cries. However, even a salute and echoes must come to
+an end, and as we were to get up early to start for the Mirror Lake, we
+turned in to bed at an early hour; not, however, to sleep, because the
+indefatigable and numerous company in the public room, off which were
+our bedrooms, were in high spirits, and the song and the dance, to the
+accompaniment of an invalid piano, for some time asserted their sway.
+
+Mr. Hutchinson had the Duke out early, because it is one of the
+obligations to see the sun rise, reflected in the Mirror Lake--if
+you can. There is no fear of cloud or rain. In the Mirror Lake is
+reflected--or was as we saw it--the precipice at the other side of the
+Valley, the bulk of Mount Watkins (so called from a photographer who
+has been daring and successful in his renderings of the Yosemite), and
+all the surrounding scenery. Once a friend and I saw a cow on its back
+in the air, by the shore of a Highland lake. The surface was smooth as
+that of the Mirror before us now. It was flapping its tail from side to
+side, and its forelegs were up in the sky. We could not make it out at
+first. There was, in fact, a cow standing near the water of the loch;
+and what we saw was a reflection of the animal, actually stronger and
+better defined than the object itself. So it was with the reflections
+in the Mirror Lake; but when the sun rose over the cliff and we looked
+at the water, the glare was too dazzling. "It was," as Mr. Wright
+remarked, "like the electric light." There were curious optical effects
+produced, some being troubled with purple, others with green or yellow
+in their eyes, after a vain attempt to look at the reflection, but that
+did not last long.
+
+We returned to breakfast to make an early start for Union and Glacier
+Points on ponies. Among the company at the hotel, introduced by Mr.
+Hutchinson, there was a young lady who was well acquainted with the
+Valley, and who proved to be a very agreeable companion in our mountain
+ride; but it was not long ere she was candid enough to let it be known
+that she did not visit the Yosemite out of love of the picturesque and
+beautiful, but that she was interested in the sale of photographs of
+the Valley, and was, in fact, a very persuasive and efficient agent of
+a firm in San Francisco, who had thus established an outlying picket of
+great activity and vigilance; and I am sure we all hope she may always
+be as successful with the visitors as she was with us. Of what we saw
+from the Glacier Point I must leave others to write or speak. It is
+reached by a zigzag on the mountain-side--a peculium of the maker, and
+all the "trails," as they are called, in the valley are the property
+of individuals or firms who are paid by tariff, and we heard "Eleven
+gone up before--Duke Sutherland, Lady Green, Sir Green, Mr. Wright, Mr.
+Russell, Mr. Jerome coming! Sixteen coming up behind!" On the plateau
+behind the cliffs, from which you look down on the Valley and at the
+snowfields on the mountain ranges opposite, there is a log house and
+shanty, and there we had a mountain meal ere we began the descent.
+
+Nothing in the way of riding is more disagreeable than going down
+a very sharp mountain-side on a pony not, for all you know, very
+sure-footed, and so instead of riding, I resolved to walk, now and
+then taking a short cut, to the great discomfiture of feet and boots,
+although it is three thousand feet to the bottom, and make the best
+of my way and the most of the road, which is very fair, down the zig
+zags. I reached the plain thoroughly hot and tired, and bathed in
+perspiration, in fifty-seven minutes. The horsekeeper, who came down
+with the rest of the party, seemed to have been affected by the rarity
+of the atmosphere or something else up at the mountain hostelry, for
+he insisted on it that I had ridden down, and demanded his horse.
+"What the thunder, Russell, have you done with my horse?" he asked
+again and again. Satisfied for the time by my assurances that I had
+not ridden at all, he went off, and then, thinking over the matter,
+came back again to repeat his question, till I told him I would not
+answer it any more. He was an amusing fellow in his way, and affable.
+He called the Duke "Sutherland," now and then putting Mr. before it.
+As he was watering his horses, he said: "Here, Mister Sutherland, lay
+hold of the bucket, will you, whilst I take a turn at this one." And
+the Duke did so with alacrity. It was a day of incessant activity. No
+sooner had the mountain party come down than they were off again to
+drive through the Valley. The rest of our party had already executed
+masterly investigations at the foot of all the waterfalls; admired
+the Bridal Veil and the Widow's Tear, as one cascade is satirically
+termed, "because," says the guide, "it dries up in six months;" had
+driven and ridden everywhere and seen everything, and we had to do the
+same; but it would need a week of conscientious work to exploit the
+Valley thoroughly. At half-past 7, the dinner hour, the little inn was
+swarming with people; the stage had arrived with fresh contingents.
+Every place was full, and what with the clatter of knives and forks,
+the clamour of waiters, the tumult of voices laughing and talking,
+it was scarcely possible to conceive that a few short years ago this
+valley was in the exclusive possession of the Indian and the wild
+beast. There is now, however, a great conflict of interests, and Mammon
+is holding his revels in the Valley. The State has voted a certain
+sum of money, twenty-five thousand dollars, I think, to buy up the
+interests of the trail-makers; that is, those who struck out and made
+paths to the various objects of attraction; but no success has yet been
+attained in the negotiations, and, indeed, I should think it a very
+bad investment for most of them to accept their share of such a sum.
+Macaulay, for example, who made the path up to the point from which
+we descended to-day, must make many hundreds of dollars in the height
+of the season, as he charges so much a visitor, and, besides, has a
+restaurant where they take their meals at the top.
+
+Next day (June 5th) we left the Yosemite with the satisfactory
+assurance that we had made the most of our time, though we could not
+believe we had done it justice. There were some small "nuages" on the
+face of our "Mirror Lake," caused by changes in the mode of conveyance;
+but we found six horses and one of the coaches of the country were
+better than four horses and two carriages of less capacity. Yosemite,
+I may tell my readers, means "Grizzly Bear" (it may be "Great Grizzly
+Bear"); but we only heard of one having been thereabouts for a long
+time, and I believe it was thoroughly tamed. After a glorious day in
+the woods, clambering up the steep from the Valley, and then on by the
+road--the only one--to Clarke's, halted there for the night, when we
+returned from a ceremonious visit to the "Big Trees." We had a most
+delightful ride from Bruce's, and a hard canter back through the woods
+on capital ponies, full of life and action, and very sure-footed, but
+rather inclined to have their own way, which was not always that of
+the rider. We turned into bed at Bruce's, quite delighted with our
+expedition, and rather anxious to see the road we had traversed in the
+dark by the garish light of day. Every traveller's tale, and every
+guide-book of recent date relating to this part of the world, has a
+full account of the dimensions, number, appearance, and condition of
+these wonders of the world. They are either prostrate, mutilated, or
+decaying; not one has survived the stormy life he must have led for
+some 3000 years--a few hundreds more or less do not signify. Those
+which remain upright are scarred by fire and lightning, and drop their
+monster arms, hung with ragged foliage and sheets of bright moss,
+mournfully over the ground where their trunks will repose in time to
+come. I cannot conceive any object of the kind so magnificent as one
+of those Washingtonias in the full vigour of mature treehood; but we
+could only fancy what it must have been like by measuring the stems,
+for there was not anywhere in the forest a tree to be seen which had
+not suffered. The best way to visit the scene--for it may well be
+called so--is to strike out from the road on the way to the Yosemite
+before the halt at Bruce's; but the hotel-keepers and stage-drivers
+will persuade the stranger, if they can, to defer the excursion till
+his return from the Valley, so as to make a half-day more out of him.
+
+_June 6th._--All up at 5 o'clock, and off soon after 6 A.M. The first
+stage, eleven miles, we did in two hours and ten minutes--a very
+pretty road; the second stage, eight miles, in forty-four minutes. The
+ravages made by fires are most deplorable. We had passed through this
+great forest track in the dark, but now seen in the morning light, the
+trunks of magnificent trees rotting on the ground, or standing upright
+with lifeless arms, consumed at the base, were visible everywhere.
+It is difficult to find out the exact truth about the cause of these
+fires. Some few people said "it was the Indians," but the weight of
+testimony attributes them to the shepherds, who for the most trifling
+purposes kindle a great fire. In some of the large trees they have
+hollowed out regular chambers, and of course the tree dies. Such waste
+of timber! For mile after mile we passed scenes of desolation which
+ere long those who allowed them will have cause to regret. From time
+to time we encountered on the road trains of waggons drawn by teams of
+handsome mules with bells, and had occasion to admire the economy of
+labour exhibited in the management, by which the driver is enabled to
+work a powerful break with one hand whilst he drives with the other.
+The next stage, of fourteen miles, was over an exceedingly bad road;
+but the horses were good, and we rattled along at a capital speed down
+towards the plain. Once the quick-eyed driver, pulling up suddenly,
+said, "See that rattle?" leaped down and made towards the bush; and
+as we followed him, sure enough we heard distinctly the noise of the
+snake, which he had intercepted on its way to a rabbit hole. It took
+refuge in a clump of bushes with gnarled roots, and coiled itself round
+one of the branches; but by a course of judicious and rather nervous
+poking it was driven from its vantage ground, and trying to escape was
+killed by the driver with a blow of his whip, followed by a good many
+unnecessary strokes from the rest of the party. It was over three feet
+long, and had just been making an evening meal upon a rabbit, which it
+had left where we had startled it; and it was evident from its swollen
+appearance that it had been for some time engaged in the warren close
+at hand.
+
+At 10.20 we reached Fresno, which is what the Americans call "quite
+a place," containing not only an hotel, a restaurant, and a store,
+but a shop where photographs were exhibited. The _chef-d'oeuvre_, a
+portrait of a Spanish lady 140 years of age, living at Los Angeles, did
+not, however, commend itself to our taste. We halted at Coarse Gold at
+11.40, and left at 12.35. Mr. Jerry Loghlan--who excused himself for
+not working on the ground that "there was no use in it, as there was
+nothing to be had," the mines being worked "out"--whose acquaintance we
+had made on the way up, a huge, broad-shouldered _vaurien_, was still
+hanging about with his specimens of quartz, gold, and rattlesnakes'
+tails, and a black eye recently acquired in battle.
+
+After a long, hot, and dusty drive, it was with no small gratification
+we made out on the flat the houses of Madera, and after a time the
+carriages of the special train. The air is so bright and pure that the
+distances are very deceptive, and it was nearly 5 o'clock P.M. before
+we reached the station, which had been visible for more than an hour
+previously. It was pleasant news to hear that the little German barber
+at the way-side had got baths all ready. In the rear of his shop there
+was a row of apartments, each provided with a clean zinc bath, hot and
+cold water to turn on at discretion, and an abundance of towels. This
+in the centre of a waste seemed very creditable to the civilisation
+of the people. I should like to know in what part of Europe you would
+get similar comfort under similar circumstances. I am afraid there are
+many parts of the British Islands where a traveller would demand such
+a luxury in vain. And the barber was there to shave those who needed
+it, and to give you all the news of the day if you wanted it. He was
+a Prussian, and he grinned from ear to ear as, in reply to my question
+whether he had served, he said: "Serve, indeed! Not I. I came away and
+escaped from all that nonsense. There is not a king or an emperor or a
+prince that I would fight for. Why should I?" "But," said I, "you would
+have to fight for the Republic here if it were in danger; and that
+would not be fighting for your fatherland." "Yes," said he, "it would,
+for this is my fatherland now. But I do not want to fight for it either
+if I can help it. Fighting is nonsense."
+
+Our excellent stewards received us, if not with open arms, with smiling
+faces. The carriages were trim and clean and fresh, the tables spread
+out, and all kinds of dainties provided for the evening meal. We rested
+quietly for the night in the siding at Madera, and got under weigh at
+5 o'clock on the morning of June 7th, the train being timed so as to
+reach San Francisco at 12.30.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The Real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!"
+
+
+The British Consul, Mr. Booker, who has been watching over the
+interests of the Queen's subjects for some thirty years here, and who
+is an institution by himself, met the train at a place called, I think,
+Porta Costa, and welcomed the Duke and his friends. There had been
+for some days an infusion of the Chinaman in the general element of
+life along the line, but here it became concentrated, and then ceased
+to attract much attention. As the train approached the wide expanse
+of muddy water from the Sacramento, which charges down with impetuous
+volume, and colours the bay with its turbid stream, we could form an
+idea of some of the advantages in the expanse of navigable river, that
+had, however, lain long without appreciation but for the bright red
+gold possessed by San Francisco. The bay is animated; white canvassed
+craft stud its waters, and the smoke of steamers pollutes the clear,
+bracing air. Italian fishermen are busy with line and net, and flights
+of ducks and squadrons of gulls and cormorants show that the waters
+are well stocked. It was too late in the year to see the country in
+the full affluence of its wealth of fruit and crops, of hay and corn,
+and the hillsides and fields are now disappointingly brown. Presently
+we arrived at Oakland, where the train was run out on a pier 3500
+yards long, to the steam ferry-boat which was to convey us across
+to San Francisco. The ferry-boat was crowded, for Oakland is a city
+of some 50,000 people; and of course it had once on a time, not very
+remote, only a few sheds and insignificant houses. From this side of
+the bay the city of the Golden Gate, some miles away, was now visible
+in all its pride of place--pride but not beauty, now at least--for the
+city presents no great attraction to the eye. The streets, running in
+parallel lines at right angles to the quay right up the sandy hillside,
+look like the ribs of some stranded monster, "lank and lean and
+brown." The most prominent object is the hotel to which we are going,
+which towers far over the general level of house-top, steeple, and
+factory-chimney.
+
+There is a little pamphlet, crammed with statistics and with an array
+of figures and superlatives enough to daze one, given to the guests
+of the Palace Hotel; but those who are in that happy category scarcely
+need the information, and those who are not could not derive any idea
+of the building from the repetition of the ciphers which are to be
+found in the guide-book. The drawing on the outside affords the best
+notion of the size, but only actual purview can enable one to judge
+of the excellent arrangements, the service, the table. For once the
+American idol "Immensity" is not overlaid. "'Tis blinding bright--'tis
+blazing white! O Vulcan! what a glow!" Electric lights flooding the
+court with brightness beyond description. And what a court! Sweetness
+and light indeed! In the great quadrangle, 144 feet by 84, there are
+fountains playing, groups of statuary, and exotic plants, and, tier
+after tier, rise the pillared terraces outside the seven storeys of
+which the main building consists, painted a lustrous white, shining
+like purest Parian. There are 755 rooms, abounding in conveniences,
+and comfortably luxurious. Each is provided with high-pressure hot and
+cold water, and there is an elaborate system of ventilation, alarms,
+conductors, pneumatic tubes, telephones, and "annunciators" for fire,
+letters, servants, &c. The beds are excellent; the furniture admirable;
+and this vast structure, 120 feet high, 275 feet broad, and 350 feet
+deep, is not only fire, but--listen--"earthquake proof"; so says the
+bill of fare, and so says ex-Senator W. Sharon, the proprietor. I have
+not the least desire to test the truth of the averment, but if I must
+be in a hotel when an earthquake visits the city in which I am, let me
+be in the Palace, San Francisco. A man may live here in the enjoyment
+of a pretty continuous series of meals and one of the best bedrooms
+for four dollars a day, and there is a lower tariff of bed and board at
+three dollars a day.
+
+_June 8th._--Our first day was rendered exceedingly pleasant by the
+kindness of General McDowell. The weather did its very best to prevent
+our enjoying it, and was signally defeated. San Francisco is perhaps
+the windiest city in the world, and at this time of year there is
+almost always a storm in the harbour, and a steady, powerful, and
+somewhat chilly blast, setting in a little before noon, and lasting
+throughout the day until nearly sundown, up the streets. The General's
+aide-de-camps came over early to the hotel, in full uniform, in honour
+of Major-General Green, but General McDowell appeared in mufti, which
+eased us down a little. A powerful steamer, the "_General Macpherson_,"
+was prepared for the party, which was swollen by a considerable number
+of gentlemen invited by our host to meet the Duke, and the gentlemen
+from Topeka, who were included in the invitation. The excursion
+afforded a favourable opportunity of inspecting the city defences.
+From Alcatraz Fort, Point and Presidio Island batteries, which would
+not be considered very formidable as far as armament is concerned,
+although their position affords great advantages for torpedo defence,
+salutes were fired in honour of Sir Henry Green. But in the case of
+some of us the sight was marred by the rising sea, which increased to
+an inconvenient height as the steamer reached the Seal Rocks, close to
+the entrance to the bay. Of the seals I shall give an account farther
+on. They did not seem to mind the steamer very much until she blew her
+whistle, when many of them splashed into the sea. At the termination of
+the trip, which lasted some four hours, General McDowell entertained
+the party at his official quarters, which are beautifully situated on
+a bluff overhanging the water of the bay.
+
+_June 9th._--We spent, in some respects, an abortive and deceitful
+day; not, indeed, that there was anything disappointing about our
+entertainment at Belmont, under the auspices of ex-Senator Sharon;
+but that we started full of enterprise, and intent upon inspecting the
+great works of the Spring Valley Reservoir, and of making an excursion
+through what was described as a very beautiful county whence is
+brought the water supply of the great city in which we were sojourning.
+However, though we were baulked in the object of our expedition, the
+day passed, and not in the least degree unpleasantly, and instead of
+going to the Lakes we drove about the neighbourhood of Belmont, and
+visited several country seats.
+
+No one who visits San Francisco should omit taking an early opportunity
+of going to Palo-Alto to inspect the stock of General Stanford's
+thorough-breds, and the breeding establishment, which as a sample of
+perfect order and management cannot be surpassed. I cannot answer for
+the figures, but I was informed that the owner spends 25,000_l._ a year
+upon the maintenance of his stud and stables, and that he has not as
+yet sold a colt or filly, or parted with a single animal; sires, mares,
+and young brood now amounting to about 700 head. They are beautifully
+housed in detached stables fitted up with every convenience that a
+horse of the highest pedigree and most luxurious taste can desire.
+I was particularly struck with the perfect silence which prevailed
+throughout the stables. No shouts to "stand over there," and none of
+that "----" (groom's expletive) which is so common in our country.
+And partly owing perhaps to that mode of treatment, and to gentleness
+in handling, all the horses without exception seemed tractable and
+sweet-tempered. High-bred stallions stood out in the open for our
+inspection, and allowed themselves to be rubbed and felt without even
+laying down their ears or raising a hind-leg from the ground. In reply
+to a question respecting a remarkably beautiful animal, which seemed to
+have a little more fire in him, the head groom said "You may walk under
+his belly if you like," and then and there he told one of the grooms
+to do so, which the man did, without attracting any unusual degree of
+attention from the animal. Outside one of the large blocks of stables
+there is a kind of testing arena, in which we were told it was the
+pleasure of General Stanford, when he was at home, to sit watching the
+performance of his young horses. It is an ellipse, like a large circus,
+bordered with a hoarding, and in the centre there is a raised stage for
+the visitors, on which are revolving chairs. The riding-master, with an
+attendant, performing the functions of the late Mr. Widdicombe, sets
+the animal in motion, checking him when he breaks into a gallop. The
+speed at which the animal trots the ellipse is known by the time marked
+on a chronometer, and the fact is recorded for the information of the
+inspectors, who can turn round their chairs and follow the action of
+the horse as it trots round the ring.
+
+The district of the State in which Palo-Alto is situated boasts of
+several residences of the Californian millionaires. One house which
+we visited, I think belonging to Mr. Flood, furnished the most ornate
+and beautiful examples of woodwork that were ever seen by any of the
+party. The house, which was as large as a good-sized English country
+mansion, is constructed of timber of the finest quality, beautifully
+worked, painted and varnished; and with moderate care a mansion of this
+kind will last, in this climate, a couple of hundred years, which to
+the American mind is an eternity. There were artists from New York,
+and the staff of an upholsterer and decorator of great renown from the
+Empire City were still busily engaged in the place as we went through
+the rooms. The magnificent halls, reception-rooms, billiard-rooms,
+library, bedrooms, all fitted up with extraordinary luxuriousness,
+but in a somewhat florid taste, were of wood, the doors of many of
+the apartments arresting attention by their extraordinary beauty and
+finish. The ceilings decorated in fresco by Italian artists, and bright
+windows filled with stained glass gave an appearance of light and
+grace to the whole residence. The kitchen arrangements were marvels
+of ingenuity, and one envied the butler who would have such a pantry
+as that which was displayed for our inspection. Some of the pictures
+which were ready to be placed on the walls were remarkable, however,
+only for the richness of their frames; and, indeed, we heard that
+the excellent proprietor was not a man of very cultivated taste; a
+child of fortune, in the prime of life and of money-making, spending
+a portion of his enormous wealth with an easy hand, but destitute of
+what is called book-learning, and leaving to some future generation the
+cultivation of the graces and the acquirement of accomplishments which
+the circumstances of his early life had denied him to effect.
+
+It had been arranged that we should return to San Francisco to dinner,
+but Senator Sharon had in his secret heart resolved that we should do
+nothing of the kind, or at least, that if we did so, it should only be
+after we had partaken of such a feast at Belmont as would very much
+indispose us to test the capabilities of the _chef_ of the Palace
+Hotel. From Palo-Alto accordingly we were driven to the charming
+country house, some miles away, of the ex-senator of Oregon, and we
+were regaled there, after some delay, at a very elaborate _déjeûner_,
+sent out from San Francisco. It was nigh 8 o'clock ere we got back
+to the city; and the night ended by what might well be called "an
+excursion" to the Baldwin Theatre, which was at the time the most
+attractive of the places of entertainment of that sort open in the
+city. As some of us were walking back, after the play was over, with
+an American friend, talking of the "hoodlums," famous rowdies, who, we
+were assured, had been of late days utterly broken up by the vigilance
+of the police, our attention was attracted to a number of lads smoking
+at the corner of the street. Our friend said "Hoodlums broken up! There
+they are--don't you believe it. That's a lot of them, and if you were
+alone you might find out very unpleasantly that there are plenty of
+them."
+
+The San Francisco journalists possess astonishing powers of
+imagination. I rubbed my eyes when I read that I had described "with
+eloquence the similarity between a marsh at San Bruno and a patch
+of jungle in the north-west of Scinde, where I had the felicity
+of spending three weeks with General Green while the natives were
+arranging a plan to capture the party and cut our throats." I never
+was in the north-west of Scinde in my life, and, although I had the
+pleasure of passing a longer time in his company in the United States,
+and of being on the same plateau before Sebastopol when he was there,
+for a still longer period, many years before, I never spent three
+weeks there with General Green. The Duke was described as "professing,
+but showing, little enthusiasm." However, these matters are of very
+slight interest or importance; only one wonders how many of the readers
+of this sort of literary work believe in it. One of our party has,
+according to a local paper, become a clergyman, and now rejoices in the
+style and title of "the Bishop," by which he is universally addressed
+by the party.
+
+While in the train, on our way to Belmont, I had the pleasure of
+being introduced to a gentleman who, although a lawyer in very large
+practice, is General of the State Volunteers; and in the course of
+conversation, I heard that he had papers containing the statement of
+a gentleman who had visited, and which convinced him that the real
+Roger Tichborne was living not very far from San Francisco. General
+Barnes, whose name and character stand high in the city of the Golden
+Gate, and whom I found to be a gentleman of great intelligence, seemed
+perfectly satisfied by the story told by this new "claimant"; but what
+he mentioned to me did not at all tend to create in my mind any notion
+that he was not an impostor, and especially were my doubts confirmed by
+the quotations which General Barnes made from some of the narrative, in
+which there was a ridiculous jumble of French and English, in order to
+justify, apparently, the stress placed by the "claimant" in his story
+on that part of his life which was passed in France. He spoke of his
+uncle as "mon oncle," and of Thursday as "Jeudi," and so on. However,
+General Barnes appeared to be so impressed by the truthfulness of the
+man's bearing, and by the full details he gave him at an audience
+in which he supplied the facts for the consecutive narrative which
+I was promised, that I expressed a desire to read it. General Barnes
+subsequently sent me a long written paper containing the heads of the
+claimant's story, a perusal of which strengthened the conviction I
+had previously entertained. I only mention this circumstance because
+there was a report spread throughout the Press, by the agency of one
+of the great telegraphic associations which furnish the American
+public with intelligence, that the Duke of Sutherland and myself
+had interviewed the real Roger Tichborne at San Francisco, and had
+satisfied ourselves that he was the man; and innumerable "headings"
+were invented for this supposed interview, of which I was soon made
+aware on my return westward in every newspaper that I read. I promptly
+denied the statement that the Duke or myself had seen the new claimant,
+and although the denial appeared in print I was exasperated day after
+day by being asked questions afterwards with regard to this supposed
+conversation with Tichborne at San Francisco, and by inquiries as to
+my real impression; so it would appear that no one had seen or paid
+any attention to the refutation of the story which had brought down
+on my devoted head communications from friends of other Tichbornes,
+of whom there are several living, some in poverty and others in
+comparative affluence, in various cities and districts of the United
+States. I had further the mortification of seeing it stated in print
+that I had used disparaging words in alluding to the credulity of
+General Barnes, which was an entirely baseless fabrication. With all
+the extraordinary keenness of the American mind generally, there is
+associated with it a considerable amount of the Anglo-Saxon quality
+which is termed "gullibility," and the land swarms with impostors who
+make a living out of the easy faith of the population. I do not speak
+merely of spiritualists, quacks, and professors of peculiar religions
+or medical dogmas, nor of the preachers of eccentric forms of faith or
+unbelief, but of the mass of persons who contrive to get an existence
+by representing that they are "someone else." Although their tricks
+are well known, the trade still flourishes. They are always the "sons
+of peers," who have got into disgrace with their families, but who
+will eventually be owners of castles of historic fame and of enormous
+estates; "distinguished soldiers"; "Maids of Honour to the Queen,"
+who for some unknown reasons are living in small out-of-the-way
+villages in the West; or political conspirators who have played a great
+part on some distinguished stage and have saved themselves from the
+consequences of defeated enterprize by taking refuge in the States.
+And then there are hordes of persons who are known by the title of
+"confidence men," who travel about on the trains or in the steamers,
+looking out for victims, or lounging about the bars and saloons,
+waiting for their prey in the shape of some facile and easy-eared
+stranger, who in consideration of their merits and distress shall give
+them temporary assistance. Sometimes, doubtless, there are cases of
+very real suffering, sorrow, and poverty, to which exile in the United
+States affords a melancholy refuge. I was obliged to hear in one great
+city of a gallant soldier who, reduced to poverty by no fault of his
+own, had quitted England and given up the society of his friends,
+and lived in a small suburb of a town on the coast of the Pacific,
+his secret known only to one or two officials, shunning all contact
+with his countrymen and evading as far as possible all inquiries of
+his friends. In San Francisco, where there is a poor-house open to
+strangers and to native-born Americans alike, there are, I am told, to
+be met with extraordinary exemplifications of the "downs" of fortune.
+Adventurous and daring spirits, and pioneers of civilisation, at one
+time probably possessed of wealth which was wasted in dissipation,
+or lost in unfortunate speculations, are there, talking of the days
+that are gone, in all languages of the world, and awaiting their end;
+while others who started with them in the same race are building their
+palaces or revelling in the enjoyment of wealth, compared to which our
+greatest fortunes are, if figures can be trusted, a mere bagatelle. How
+rapidly some of these fortunes can be made was illustrated by numerous
+stories connected with some of the richest men in California. I was
+told by an eminent tradesman of San Francisco that one day a miner came
+into his establishment to buy a watch, which he said must be cheap
+and good, for he wanted something he could trust to in the matter of
+time, as he was going off with a party on an exploring expedition
+after gold. This was in the early time of the great "booms" in the
+West. He selected a watch, for which he paid $40, and departed. The
+following day he appeared in the shop and asked to see the proprietor,
+and then, producing the watch, he said he would like to have $30 for
+it, as he had lost all his money in a "spree" the night before and
+must have something to start with. The jeweller said, "Well, I will
+return you what you gave me for the watch, as it has suffered no harm,
+and you shall have your $40 back again." The man went away exceedingly
+rejoiced, and the incident was forgotten. Some eighteen months
+afterwards a man came to the establishment, and looking at rings, gold
+chains, and jewellery of the most costly character, and asking for the
+best of everything that they had got, gave orders which occasioned the
+attendant to have some doubts as to his sanity, or certainly as to the
+means he had of paying the amount, which was rapidly running up to tens
+of thousands of dollars. So he sought out his principal. The strange
+customer said, "I suppose you don't know me?" which was admitted to
+be the case. He went on buying all the same, making the remark, "You
+need not be uneasy about the money, for So-and-so (the bankers) will
+tell you I am all right, and when you send the things home you shall
+be paid. I am Joe Smith, from whom some time ago you took a watch he
+bought from you when he came to your store, and gave him the full value
+for it when he was in want of money," and so departed, having shown his
+gratitude by buying 6000_l._ worth of jewellery. This worthy miner is
+now one of the wealthy pillars of the State.
+
+The Chinese quarter of San Francisco has been described, I will not say
+_ad nauseam_, but as often as any book has been written which contains
+an account of a visit to the city of the Golden Gate. Of course we
+went there, and saw all that was to be seen under the best possible
+auspices, for Mr. Bee, whom I have already mentioned, was our guide
+and companion, assisted by an exceedingly intelligent officer of the
+police force; and on the occasion of our second visit, when we went to
+the theatre, we had the advantage of being under the protection of the
+gentleman who represents law and order, on behalf of the municipality,
+in connection with the Chinese population and the arrangements for
+theatrical performances.
+
+The inspection of the dreadful den in which the opium-smokers were to
+be seen suggested to my mind a train of thought in connection with the
+traffic which I would not willingly have communicated to my American
+friends. It will seem incredible some day to the awakened conscience
+of the nation that we should have ever sanctioned such a frightful
+crime as the opium traffic. "It only poisons about two millions of
+people," is the excuse, "and brings in one-sixth of the whole revenue
+of India." If ever it were justifiable to utter the exclamation "Perish
+India!" it would be, I believe, in regard to that disgraceful source of
+revenue, and the necessity that is imposed upon us, as it is alleged,
+to raise it, in order to maintain the government of our Indian empire.
+Here in San Francisco the State has nothing to do with the sale of the
+poison, and it is very questionable whether the police regulations
+should not be applied to it, just as they are to persons who have
+tried to commit suicide, or to the inebriates in public-houses, or to
+places where intemperance is carried on to an extent injurious to the
+public peace. Death is the inevitable result of continued indulgence
+in opium-smoking, although it is true that in some cases the victim
+lingers on a few years, utterly indifferent to all the business of life
+except the one--the means of supplying himself with his only source
+of enjoyment. I was in one of the shops where they sell the drug, and
+was much struck by the cadaverous, sunken faces of the unfortunate
+customers, with bright dreamy eyes, trembling limbs, and wasted bodies,
+who came in to buy it. It is cheap enough, in all conscience, as a very
+small quantity suffices to produce what is called "the desired effect";
+but for its bulk it is exceedingly dear, and indulgence in it must
+consume a considerable amount of the earnings of the best-paid artisans
+when they are no longer able to earn sufficient to keep them with a
+full supply. "Then," as our informant says, "they will commit any crime
+to get it."
+
+The general impression made upon me by the appearance of the Chinese
+population was most favourable. I do not now speak of what one might
+see in going through the haunts where the police regulations assign
+exclusive possession to certain classes of the population, which, sooth
+to say, seemed numerous enough; I refer to the business quarters, and
+to the crowds of cleanly, intelligent, well-behaved people of both
+sexes in the streets. General McDowell, and many other persons, for
+whose opinion the greatest respect must be entertained, look with
+apprehension on the effect of the Chinese immigration, and have,
+indeed, declared that it will destroy the Union if it be not checked;
+and these apprehensions are based upon the possibility that in time
+millions on millions of the swarming population of China will inundate
+the United States, gradually overrun town after town, usurping all
+the fields of labour, and beating down the white man to the greatest
+misery by competition in every branch of trade, industry, and labour.
+This party has successfully, I believe, impressed its views upon a
+considerable number of senators and representatives in the Eastern
+States, who can exercise pressure on the Supreme Government; and
+the treaty recently signed between the Republic and China contains
+provisions which enable the authorities at the western seaports to
+exercise considerable control over the current of emigration. But, on
+the other hand, it is alleged that the fears which are expressed of
+a rapidly increasing exodus of Chinese from China, and an anabasis
+into the United States, are purely imaginary--in fact, unreal and
+pretentious. The pro-Chinese party allege that the emigration comes
+from only one port in one province, and that you may go all over the
+West, and ask any Chinaman or Chinawoman where he or she comes from,
+and you are met with the invariable answer, from the one port. The
+friends of the Chinese--arguing, moreover, that the State at large
+is benefited enormously by the accession to its resources from the
+Celestial Empire, and that the labour was attacked, not because it
+was cheap, but because it was good; that it is now indispensable, for
+without Chinamen and Chinawomen it would be almost impossible to carry
+on the ordinary life of these cities--allege that the agitation which
+has been so violent in San Francisco is mainly encouraged by those
+who want to secure the Irish vote. Colonel Bee represents these views
+very strongly. He argues that Canton, not larger than the State of
+New Hampshire, is the sole source of emigration. He insists on it that
+there are no more than 100,000 Chinese in the whole of the Union, and
+that for the last ten years the emigrants have not sufficed to fill
+the places of those who had gone home with money, never intending to
+return, or who had died. He maintains, indeed, that the Chinese are
+decreasing rather than otherwise; and with all the power of figures,
+which he has at his fingers' ends as Consul, demonstrates that a very
+large proportion of the Chinese who are entered as arriving at San
+Francisco and other parts are the same men and women as those who came
+some years previously and went back to their native country, returning
+to gain more dollars.
+
+The principal enemies of the Chinese are the Irish, who, having
+monopolised the whole of the work of bricklayers, plasterers, carters,
+porters, and general labourers until their arrival, have been forced
+to reduce their rates of labour steadily by the competition of the
+Chinaman.
+
+The part of the population of San Francisco denominated the Sand lot,
+and especially those connected with the political associations of the
+city, do not by any means share Colonel Bee's views; but the agitation
+is dying out, and the meetings, which were of weekly occurrence, to
+excite the people against the Mongolians have decreased in number,
+importance, and interest. The directors of public companies, and
+the contractors for public works, are all in favour of the Chinese
+workman, who is sober, industrious, and orderly; and although the trade
+combinations among them are exceedingly subtle, and their powers of
+association for trade purposes remarkable, being moreover the most
+ancient in the world, the Chinese in the Western States have not as
+yet taken to indulge in the luxury of strikes. As domestic servants,
+nurses, and attendants on children, they appear to be affectionate
+and careful; and nothing could be better than the service of the hotel
+in which we were lodged, the great portion of which was carried on by
+Chinamen and women.
+
+_June 10th._--In the spacious courtyard of the Palace Hotel, at
+7 o'clock this morning, there might have been observed three
+well-appointed waggons (as Americans call the vehicle more
+appropriately termed "spider" at the Cape), each with two horses
+of race, fast trotters, panting for a spin through the city and the
+Park out to the shores of the Pacific. The Duke and Sir H. Green and
+Mr. Stephen were driven by Mr. Howard. Mr. Wright was "personally
+conducted" by Mr. ----, and I was put behind a pair of as handsome
+chestnuts as could well be seen anywhere, of which the owner and
+driver (General Barnes) was very reasonably proud. The streets of
+San Francisco, like those of most of the American cities we have
+visited, are atrociously paved; the torture of driving over boulders
+is aggravated by the sharp ribs of the tram ways, so that it is not
+pleasant, if, indeed, it be possible, to drive rapidly till the limit
+of municipal incompetence or fraud be passed. But once out on the
+suburbs the chestnuts were invited to step it, and were bowling along
+at a good fourteen miles an hour on our way to the Park, over as good
+a road as horse or man ever felt under hoof or foot. The Park not long
+ago was a waste of sand, it is now swarded and planted with shrubs, and
+luxuriant with flowers. Notices that it was unlawful to do more than
+ten miles an hour were posted up, but the General did not pay strict
+attention to them till he came near shady places, where experience
+warned him that policemen might be lying privily in ambush. The pace
+was quickened till the waggon seemed to fly through the air rather
+than move over the ground. It was the perfection of travelling on
+wheels--almost as buoyant as a headlong gallop. The waggon weighed but
+180 lb., the powerful animals "scarcely felt it more than their tails."
+I had a turn at the reins by "kind permission" of the General. The art
+of driving trotters needs practice. You must keep a strong, steady
+pull on the head, or they "break." Very soon I had the satisfaction
+of making the chestnuts break the law with a vengeance, and of hearing
+the General say, "We are just within the three minutes! not ten seconds
+inside it!"--that is, of trotting at the rate of just twenty miles an
+hour. Up hill and down hill, and along the flat out of the Park and
+over the smooth road, and in half an hour the Pacific was in sight, and
+the murmurs of the surf rose above the rhythm of the regular beat of
+the eight hoofs in front of us! Cliff House was in view. Seal Rocks,
+in their setting of foam, lay before us, and in forty minutes from the
+time we left the hotel, despite policemen, miles of bad pavements, and
+tramways, we drew up at the steps of Cliff House, nine miles from San
+Francisco, and the trotters had not turned a hair. From the verandah
+at the sea front of the hotel, we enjoyed for half an hour a spectacle
+which is, as far as I know, unique. At the distance of 500 or 600 yards
+from the beach at our feet there is a group of four very rugged rocks,
+with serrated edges and tops, the sides broken here and there into
+ledges and small platforms. They are too small to be called islands,
+the largest being, as it seemed, not 100 yards wide. The slopes are
+not, I think, so steep as they looked on the land side. On the two
+largest of these rocks there were herds of sea-lions, so close that we
+could see, through very poor opera-glasses, with the greatest ease,
+their eyes, teeth, and whiskers, as they reposed or played with each
+other. Some had clambered to the highest ledges, escalading the sides
+by a series of painful-looking struggles with their flappers; others
+were fast asleep in cosy nooks; some were tossing their heads about and
+making believe to bite each other in sport; the younger ones were bent
+on teasing their fathers and mothers by uncouth gambols. As they played
+or moved they uttered cries between a bark and a roar; now and then the
+noise was like that of a pack of hounds in full cry, and the effect of
+the strange sound mingling with the tumult of the surf and the beat of
+the waves was most singular and "eldrich." Those fresh from the sea
+were shining black, but became lighter as they dried. The older ones
+were not darker than cinnamon bears or unwashed sheep. As many of those
+on the rocks had not long left the water the general effect of the
+herd put one in mind of a gathering of enormous slugs on cabbages--not
+a poetic simile, but a just one, I think. Occasionally a sea-lion,
+hungry or bored by his companions, threw himself with a splash into the
+wave, and it was interesting to watch the rapidity and actual grace of
+his movements in the sea compared with his laborious efforts on the
+land. One could see them quite clearly through the body of the heavy
+billows; occasionally a bold one would glide close on shore and fish
+in the edge of the surf, raising his head and shoulders clear above
+the surface, and then diving out of sight. They were cruising about
+in every direction. You remember the sea-lion at the Zoo, of which the
+French attendant was so fond? Well, the creatures below and before us
+were most of them double the size of that fellow, and several exceeded
+the largest ox in size. The monsters are quite well known; one is named
+Ben Butler, "because he is such a great beast." They were formerly
+protected by law, but some one thought they killed too many fish, and
+the law was repealed. They are safe all the same, for there is a law
+against the discharge of firearms within 300 yards of an inhabited
+dwelling; Cliff House throws its ægis over the sea-lions in that wise;
+but the quantity of fish which must be devoured by these mountainous
+phocæ (an they be so) daily would maintain a decently-sized city. The
+hide furnishes the "sealskin" used to cover trunks, and the body yields
+oil fat, and the tusks are close, white, and hard. These sea-lions
+breed far away up north, and come with their young regularly every
+year to the same resorts; but incessant war is waged upon them by the
+sealers and whalers, so that the chances are against the beast where he
+is not protected by law, and their numbers do not increase. Altogether,
+the spectacle was one never to be forgotten. A hotel, with oysters
+awaiting us for a forebreakfast refection in the background, waggons
+from Michigan, horses from Kentucky, all the apparatus of civilised
+life close at hand, the Pacific and its strange wild denizens at our
+feet! "Let us turn in and have an oyster." "What! oysters in June?"
+"Yes, and good ones too." In this favoured land oysters are in season
+all the year round. There are no oysters found on the coast, I am told,
+and they will not breed. They are brought all the way from the Atlantic
+coast when they are mere oysterlets, and they are laid down in the
+Pacific, where they grow fat and large, but are not "crossed in love,"
+and therefore are fit to be eaten from January to January. They are
+about the size of a spring chicken, and need some courage on the part
+of an assailant who desires to dispose of them as he would a native.
+
+This was our last day in the city of the Golden Gate, and the
+photographers were masters of the situation; and there was much
+_débris_ of sight-seeing to sweep up--visits to be made, shops to be
+inspected, among which I must mention specially the Diamond Palace
+of Colonel Andrews, one of the handsomest jeweller's "stores" in
+the world, though it is not as large as the establishments of the
+principal firms in London, Paris, Vienna, or as Tiffany's in New
+York. The distinctive feature of the interior is the decoration of the
+paintings of fair women, on the ceiling and the walls above the cases,
+by necklaces, diadems, zones, and other feminine ornaments of real
+diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and pearls. The pictures are the work of
+an Italian artist of merit, and the general effect is very striking;
+but I doubt whether it is a good way of inducing people to buy the
+articles which bedeck the ideal beauties. At Bradley and Rulofson's
+we saw photographs of many of our friends, and had one more proof of
+the smallness of the world. Every one we knew seemed to have visited
+San Francisco. There we all submitted to inevitable fate, and left our
+negatives behind us, but the Duke was captured by a rival photographic
+institution, and had a sitting all to himself.
+
+The aspect of a crowd in a large American city differs from that of
+the passers-by in the street of an English town, most of all in the
+appearance of such a large proportion of coloured people. Here it may
+be said, however, that they are colourless, as the prevailing hue of
+the foreign population is that of the Chinaman. In Canada the number
+of negroes, or of persons of negro descent, of varying gradations of
+colour, is remarkable, considering the circumstances, but they probably
+may be accounted for by the emigration in the olden times of those
+who were escaping from slavery, or who went with their masters and
+employers into the Dominion. In the cities on the Lakes I was very
+much struck by the persons of undoubted African descent who are to
+be met with in the streets in great numbers; and in Chicago there is
+a quarter nearly exclusively occupied by them--honest, industrious,
+hard-working people seemingly, given to stand about at the street
+corners, however, a good deal on Sundays, and cultivating a bright
+attire, especially on the part of the ladies, whose bonnets and
+shawls were things to wonder at. There are loafers amongst them, as
+there are amongst their betters; but, taking them all in all, in the
+Northern, Western, and Atlantic States, they are a decidedly useful
+element in the population, easing the burden of labour to the white
+man, and following many occupations, such as those of waiters, barbers,
+bricklayers, and labourers in the less skilled sort of work, for which
+it would be difficult to find American substitutes. One peculiarity,
+which may be accounted for by some wiser person than myself, seems to
+be their recklessness as to what they put on their heads. Whether it
+is merely a compliance with the custom of the white man, which impels
+them to cover the highly effective protection against sun and cold
+which Nature has given them, or not; or whether it is that the canons
+of taste in such matters have not yet settled down to those accepted
+by people in civilised life in the Western world, the male negro has
+the most extraordinary indifference as to the quality and shape of the
+thing which he calls a hat or cap, and it would not be easy to find out
+of the gutters of some Irish country town anything more dilapidated,
+battered, and utterly incoherent than some of the hats which one may
+see on the heads of people of colour, especially down South. Whatever
+other virtues they may have, neatness is not amongst them; for, with
+all their affectation of finery, their clothes are generally ill-kept,
+their houses are unkempt, and, where they are cultivators of the soil,
+the operations are performed in a slovenly manner. The traditions of
+the old plantation have descended upon them, and influence them.
+
+On my way from Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the bankers in Montgomery
+Street--I believe the former of these gentlemen has had the
+privilege of giving his name to steamers and cities, leastways
+railway stations--I saw a party of sailors belonging to the United
+States steamer "_Rodgers_," now about to proceed in search of the
+"_Jeannette_," and I was much struck by their resemblance to our own
+bluejackets in general "cut of the jib," dress, face, and figure.
+They were in charge of a smart-looking officer, and had been paying a
+farewell visit to the fruit and vegetable markets--one of the sights of
+the city. They were in high good-humour, laughing and chatting loudly,
+more than is the wont of Americans, and I could not but contrast
+their fine physique with that of the soldiers we had seen at Sir Henry
+Green's parade when General McDowell took us round the harbour. The
+detachment at the Fort, consisting of infantry and artillerymen, and
+squads of different regiments, had some weedy veterans in the ranks,
+who had lost their setting up and did not look fit for much work; but
+the sailors, probably a picked lot, were good all round.
+
+_À propos_ of Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the number of wealthy
+men in San Francisco of Irish origin or nationality is remarkable.
+Millionaires with names of Milesian prefixes and terminations are
+phenomenal. We had intended to return to the East Coast by way of Utah,
+and to stay a day or two at Salt Lake City, but the railroad company
+did not consider it expedient to give the party the facilities which
+had been accorded in every other instance by the American authorities
+to the Duke and his friends. To have gone round Salt Lake City would
+have cost a couple of hundred pounds more for haulage, and we were
+much more interested in seeing Leadville and Denver than the City of
+the Mormons; the game was not thought to be worth the candle, and
+it was resolved that we would go back as we came, in charge of the
+representatives of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad Company.
+It was only one item more in the long list of things we ought to have
+seen if we could, and I can safely say that we had a large share of the
+common experience of travellers in regard to the relations between the
+possible and the impossible in the course of a journey in a strange
+land, where there are for ever cropping up representations that "you
+really ought not to leave without seeing" so and so. The evening of our
+last day was passed in the society of General McDowell, Mr. Morgan,
+the English Consul, Colonel Bee, and others, who had done so much to
+make the visit to San Francisco all that could be desired, and whose
+courtesy and kindness will ever be remembered by every one of us most
+gratefully. Like Sir Charles Coldstream, we "had seen everything,
+done everything," but, unlike him, had found there was plenty in it.
+The street railway--most ingenious and successful, invaluable in a
+hilly city like Lisbon--the Chinese Theatre, the Joss houses--shops,
+eating-houses, opium dens of the Chinese quarter, the clubs, the
+principal buildings, the streets, the shops, the markets, the harbour,
+the suburbs, and country round about--all had been inspected, and
+yet each day we were told that we were doing positive injustice to
+ourselves and to the objects which were perforce neglected. In the
+morning there was a levée in the hotel to bid the Duke good-bye and
+see the party start on their return journey. At the very last moment a
+gentleman came forward with a proposal to take us to the North Pole by
+balloon, but there was not time to consider it in all its bearings and
+the offer was declined with thanks. We started at 10 A.M., and the Duke
+was attended to the boat and to the station across the water by a large
+body of San Franciscans, who took leave ere the train started. The
+gentlemen who were with us on the journey westwards attended the Duke
+on his way towards the Eastern States. All day we travelled through
+California--"the hot furnace"--which at first, however, proved to be
+only very warm, and the coloured servants had constant supplies of iced
+compounds to be drunk for the solace of the homeward bound, and had
+laid in a stock of San Franciscan luxuries to soothe the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Cañon.
+
+
+_June 12th._--The train stopped at Los Angeles at six in the morning,
+and, drawing up my window-blind, the first person I saw on the platform
+was our good friend Colonel Baker, who had come to meet us, intent
+on the good offices which he could render during our stay. These were
+exhibited in the form of a beautiful bouquet for Lady Green, baskets
+of limes and oranges, and great bunches of grapes. In this happy valley
+there are cares as in the rest of the world. The Colonel told us he was
+in the midst of a great litigation affecting his claim to a large tract
+of land in which there are said to exist the richest tin-mines in the
+American Continent. Yet why should he care about his tin-mine? There
+were rolling acres rich with corn and fruit, and there were flocks and
+herds and vineyards, and a charming home of his own. Nevertheless, if
+the want of that tin-mine made him at all unhappy, I am sure those who
+were indebted to him, as we were, for so many kindnesses, will wish his
+claim to be triumphantly asserted, and long possession of all that is
+to follow.
+
+I dreaded the passage of the Desert to Yuma; and indeed the heat was
+intense. No wonder that with the thermometer ranging from 100° to 104°,
+all the blinds in the car were pulled down, and we sprawled listlessly
+on the cushions. Our excellent attendants put forth all the resources
+of art in the shape of ice and preparations of limes and cocktails;
+but the temperature would not be baffled. We could just read, and were
+aware that we were living, and some of us had strength enough now and
+then to execute forays against flies with napkins to drive them out
+of the carriages. How could people live out in the open, and work in
+the mines, or pursue any out-of-door employment in such torrid heat?
+Nevertheless, there was a marked distinction between it and the heat to
+be endured with the mercury at an equal height in India.
+
+The speed of the train was very respectable--somewhat over twenty miles
+an hour--and at that rate we ran from San Gorgonio and Banning on to
+Cabazon, through a flat plain, dry and burnt up, very like the desert
+around Suez, and fringed, like it, with rocky and rugged hills, save
+that there was a great growth of Spanish bayonets and cactuses of all
+kinds among the stones and sand, and that snow was to be seen on all
+the hill-tops in the distance. For 107 miles there was no water to
+be met with going along this plain; but the mirage, of which I have
+spoken in the account of our journey to San Francisco, was frequent
+and beautiful; and again I was fascinated by the sight of lovely lakes
+embowered in trees, with stately cities on their shores, changing and
+shifting and melting away, only again to assume apparent substance to
+cheat the senses.
+
+Once the train stopped to allow the passengers to visit the
+mud-geysers, which were not more than 150 yards on the left of the
+line, and with commendable curiosity most of us got out and walked
+over the baked earth to the spot. There was no mark whatever of smoke
+or vapour to indicate the place; and it was almost startling to come
+suddenly upon a kind of pond of semi-liquid mud, fifty or sixty feet
+in diameter, on which huge bubbles, varying in size from an orange to
+a hogshead, were continually forming and bursting. There was a faint
+sulphurous smell, and the ground around the liquefied portion of the
+surface, where the bubbles were breaking, was hot and cracked. The
+conductor said that all attempts to reach the bottom of the holes
+through which the bubbles arose had failed. Two of these geysers
+were in active operation, and the plain away to the left of the rail
+was said to contain a great number of them. After all it was very
+unsatisfactory to see this ebullition going on without being able to
+account for it; and, generally, I think we thought less of each other
+and of our information after visiting them, and finding out that not
+one of us had any theory on the subject which would bear either fire or
+water.
+
+I do not think I ever saw a sunset more beautiful than that which
+marked the close of this day--certainly not in India or South Africa,
+nor on the prairie, for which they make claims of surpassing beauty in
+the matter of sunsets. As it died out, I felt that "thing of beauty"
+could not "be a joy for ever," for it was a combination of colour and
+of form, including sky and mountain, that it would be impossible to see
+again.
+
+The kindness of which we have had so many proofs, has followed,
+accompanied, and preceded us all unremittingly and unweariedly. A
+rough with some Bourbon on board mounted to-day the steps of the
+car at a station, and insisted on seeing "this Duke." When he was
+told that the object of his attention was engaged, he said, "This
+is a land of liberty (as in his case it was), and he doesn't want a
+bodyguard with him!" But the conductor sent him away about his business
+without trouble. On the platform at Benson a few miners asked "the
+Duke to come out and show himself." The people at the stations were
+generally satisfied with a quiet peep; now and then an enthusiastic
+Scotchman claimed a shake hands, which was always accorded to him. A
+sleeper placed across the rails (accounted for by the officers on the
+hypothesis that some loafer without a ticket had been turned off by the
+conductor, and had put the sleeper in the way of the train to wreak
+his vengeance--a thing which has occurred nearer home) was the only
+substantial danger to which we were here exposed.
+
+The heat (June 13th) was intense. The thermometer rose to 105 at one
+o'clock in the day, and it was little comfort to us to be told that at
+Deming it had been up to 110 the day before.
+
+For some days we have been supping full of horrors, indeed
+breakfasting and dining on them, for the papers contain accounts of
+the extraordinary homicides all about this region. Tucson, Benson,
+Wilcox--all these places were resounding with the exploits of "Billy
+the Kid." Now at Tucson there is, I believe, a man whose name was once
+amongst the very foremost in the United States. Who some twenty years
+and more ago had not heard of General Fremont, "the Pathfinder," the
+adventurous traveller, the energetic politician, the dashing soldier?
+He had gone at the outbreak of the war to take up the chief command
+in the west with all the pomp and circumstance of glorious war. I was
+somewhat astonished to find that he was at Tucson, the governor of the
+Territory, on a humble salary, apparently the world-forgetting and
+the world-forgot, while "Billy-the-Kid" was perpetrating numberless
+atrocities under his nose, and Mr. Pat Garrett was dressing up his
+loins with his revolver-belt, and about to go forth with a chosen band
+of citizens and seek the redoubtable William.[A]
+
+A person who has only seen settled States in Europe, or the Eastern
+States of the North American Continent, cannot form any notion of a
+territory which has become a centre of attraction to all the wild
+adventurers and daring spirits which society, in the process of
+formation, throws out as a sort of advanced guard. In Arizona, in
+1870, according to the American Almanac, out of a total population
+of 9658, 2729 could not write and 2690 could not read. Of the total
+population, 2491 were foreign born, and 2753 were natives, the rest
+being coloured or under ten years of age. In New Mexico, out of 91,000
+people, 48,000 over ten years of age could not read, and 51,000 whites
+over ten years of age could not write. It may be inferred from such
+figures what is the general condition of the labouring classes in these
+States and Territories. The inhabitants of these States have doubled
+in the last ten years. They are filling up at a rate inconceivably
+great--so great, indeed, that American newspapers are fairly bewildered
+and American statesmen appalled by the rush across the Rocky Mountains
+and down the rivers, although as yet but a small proportion of the
+immense stream of immigrants has flooded the outlying territories. "At
+this rate," exclaims a Western editor, "the old monarchies of Europe
+will soon be depopulated." When Mr. Lincoln, in 1861, addressed his
+inaugural to the expectant States he expressed his confident belief
+that there were children then born who would live to see the flag of
+the Union floating over no less than 100,000,000 of human beings. The
+recent census of the United States gives a return of 51,000,000 of
+people, but the most eminent statisticians have arrived at the belief
+that the progress and increase of the States will not be at the same
+rapid rate as that which marked the history of the Republic since the
+cessation of the great civil war. It may be fairly inferred, however,
+that at the end of this century the population of the United States
+will greatly exceed that of Russia, or that of any empire except
+China and Great Britain, including Hindostan. The population, on
+each period of ten years, has increased at an average of more than
+30 per cent.; in fact, nearer 33 per cent., and the centre of it has
+travelled westward at the rate of more than fifty miles every ten
+years, till the centre of population is now eight miles west by south
+from Cincinnati. In 1800 the Union extended over only 239,935 square
+miles. Its flag now floats over 1,272,239 square miles of States and
+over 1,800,000 square miles of Territory governed by the central power
+at Washington. "We cannot think," exclaims a Republican writer, "that
+the war of rebellion settled all our troubles and made us secure in
+our Republic. This enormous growth of the practically unknown West
+reveals to us the grave dangers that threaten our nation. We meet
+there the tremendous influences of alien races and alien religions."
+The Americans of New England and of the Eastern States do not feel
+anxious on that score, because their institutions are thoroughly
+founded, their character formed, and they trust to the great power of
+accomplished facts to assimilate the alien elements and sustain the
+fabric of the Republic. The bugbear of a great Chinese immigration
+has ceased to practically influence Californian politics, and it may
+be safely assumed that the bulk of the future immigrants from the
+Celestial Empire will only come from the same sources as those which
+have hitherto supplied the stream. No wonder, however, that thoughtful
+Americans--and there are many who think of the future of their country
+as something quite apart from dollars--are filled with grave anxieties
+when they see such floods of purely foreign material, which will in
+all probability exercise a preponderating influence over the politics
+of the Great Republic, surging into the States. Particularly have the
+home missionary clergy, as they are styled, been struck by the enormous
+influence which this foreign immigration has exercised. According
+to one authority, the Rev. Mr. Stimson, of Worcester, "it is not a
+question of spreading any particular form of Christianity or of Church
+government, but a momentous struggle of American institutions with
+alien civilisations and religions for the control of the great Western
+country. The problem is not a matter of cleaning door-yards, but of
+saving a continent for freedom." The Chinese Question and the Indian
+Question are, they think, as nothing compared with the Irish Question
+and the German Question. "The Republic," we are told, "stands on a
+foundation as broad as humanity itself," whatever that may mean, "but
+its condition of existence is a universal regard for the interests of
+all." Often during the course of the Duke of Sutherland's excursion
+it was our good fortune to fall in with men of great political and
+social knowledge. The future of the Republic is, in the mind of these
+men, clouded with uncertainty and doubt. They are apprehensive of
+some unknown danger. It may be corruption of political life leading
+to want of faith in free institutions; it may be the rival energies
+and the opposing interests which Washington foresaw as likely to array
+the East against the West--the Atlantic States against the inland
+States, and it is calculated by some sanguine people that before this
+century is over there will be eighteen, or possibly twenty, States
+admitted into the Union formed out of the Territories which are now
+under the central Government at Washington. Upon such influences as
+these alien immigration may be expected to act with prodigious power.
+At a recent meeting in Springfield a clergyman gave as an illustration
+of the absolute indifference of the foreign immigrants to Republican
+institutions a conversation he had with a Norwegian minister in
+Minneapolis. "There is nothing," said this gentleman, "in America which
+we Norwegians regard as of value except your land and your money. We
+do not want to learn English: we do not want to know the Americans
+around us; we have certainly no notion of becoming Americans, but we
+intend to remain as we are--Norwegians." The Mormons control Utah. They
+boast that they will soon govern five of the most important territorial
+regions beyond the Rockies. But if Utah becomes a State, as she hopes
+to do, she will found a Mormon code of laws and institutions beyond the
+power of the United States to control. New Mexico may be considered as
+a Roman Catholic State under the control of an excellent archbishop. Of
+course all prophecies may be falsified by events, but judging by the
+eighty years which have elapsed of the present century, and from the
+ratio of increase in that time in the United States, the most liberal
+construction may be placed even upon the bounding estimates of American
+politicians and statists. When we look to the Far West and see, for
+instance, how Winnipeg has become the centre of a great network of
+river navigation, 300 miles in one direction, 600 miles in another,
+and that the Mackenzie River passes for 1200 miles through what is
+declared to be the future wheat region of the world, we may easily
+comprehend the anxiety with which the patriotic American is filled lest
+the future of such a State should fall into hands antagonistic to the
+principles in which his _beau idéal_ of government has been founded and
+has prospered.
+
+_June 14._--At Lamy, a station named after the good archbishop of Santa
+Fé, where we halted for a short time whilst the passengers of another
+train were breakfasting, a citizen came up to me on the platform and
+exclaimed, as if he were very much impressed by the news he was going
+to give, "If you look in there, sir, you will see Bob Ingersoll at
+breakfast!" I asked whether there was anything very remarkable about
+the fact. "Well, sir," he said, "he is Colonel Ingersoll, of whom you
+have heard. He is the most remarkable in-fidel in the United States,
+and I really think he believes what he preaches. A good man to look at,
+too, and, they say, first-rate in his family." I had a glance at the
+believer in unbelief, and saw a very presentable-looking person, of
+fine appearance and good features, busily engaged in making the most
+of his time at one of the tables in the refreshment-room. He was the
+observed of all observers, and appeared to like it; and I understood
+from one of the crowd that he had just returned from inspecting some
+mining ventures in which he was concerned; for, if he does not believe
+in the world to come, he is credited with very strong faith in the
+excellencies of the possession of wealth in the world that is. His
+lectures are attended by crowded audiences, but, as an astute American
+observed, "they won't come to much, for, after all, people who do
+not believe anything can never get up a great enthusiasm. It is in
+believing something that the populace has faith."
+
+Once more our eyes were rejoiced with the sight of the lovely plains
+of Las Vegas, wide-spreading fields decked with flowers and dotted with
+flocks, bordered with ranges of softly contoured mountains, the courses
+of the water streams indicated by bright vegetation and by growth of
+trees of many kinds. From Lamy (170 miles) there is a gradual rise to
+Raton, which we reached at 6.30 in the evening. The appearance of the
+region we traverse as the train approaches the Raton Pass presents
+a strong contrast to the desolate country through which we have been
+passing. From Raton the train was drawn by two engines in front and
+shoved by one behind, and even then the pace was not very rapid, for
+the ascent is very sharp. All the more could we enjoy a very glorious
+sunset, as we slowly ascended the mountain. Then darkness came on
+rapidly, and we slid down towards La Junta into the night, and were all
+fast asleep long before we arrived there. In the very early morning,
+on June 15th, some two hours after midnight, we halted for a time at
+Pueblo. At 9 o'clock we had to leave our beloved Pullman and change the
+cars, for we were to take a fresh point of departure, starting from
+the Union Depôt upon the Denver and Rio Grande narrow-gauge railway
+for Denver, 119 miles distant, and making an excursion on the way to
+Manitou, to which we diverged from Colorado Springs: for to go within
+reach of that famous resort and not to see it would have been a great
+outrage on all the rules and regulations established for the observance
+of travellers. Certes narrow-gauge railways need an apology. Their
+_raison d'être_ is, at the best, that they are better than nothing.
+"If you won't have us, you can have nothing else." And in such a
+mountainous region as we were about to visit, the difficulties and
+expense connected with a broad-gauge line would have been enormous,
+if indeed it could be constructed at all. The narrow-gauge carriages,
+with seats to match, with which we were made acquainted for the first
+time, were of course much less commodious and comfortable than those
+we had quitted, but far superior to those on the Indian lines of the
+same gauge, and Indian engineers had been over to take a lesson from
+the Americans for the use of their carriage-builders. Atchison, Topeka,
+and Santa Fé Company and Denver and Rio Grande Company have been at
+daggers drawn and pistols cocked--ay, and fired--and at battles waged,
+in times gone by; and now our friends on the former line were, like
+ourselves, the guests of the latter, which was represented by several
+official gentlemen anxious to do the honours to the Duke. The scenery
+becomes grander and wilder every mile as the special hurries on as
+well as it can over the sinuous line, which is piercing a mountain
+region savage and sterile, and climbing by the sides of ravines and
+creeping upwards in rocky valleys with pine-clad hill-tops and frowning
+cliffs above. The engineer who designed the line is a Scotchman named
+McMurtrie--or at least of recent Scotch origin--and he seems to have a
+special gift for such aspiring work, and a gradient-compelling genius
+not to be baffled by altitudes. We were mounting towards the snows.
+Range upon range of whitened summits and hoary ridges came in view,
+all paying homage to the rugged crown of Pike's Peak, which can be
+seen from points more than 140 miles away. The fleecy cloudland which
+seemed to lie before us, as we looked away from Pueblo, was resolving
+itself into savage alps. And in these passes, which the eye caught for
+a moment, there might be El Dorados still undiscovered, for around us
+were cities springing out of the desert. Here the enchanter's wand is
+the explorer's pick, and no one could say where the precious ore might
+not be awaiting its touch. We were coming to the Land of Promises. The
+conversation of our new friends, among whom were some gentlemen of the
+press, related mostly to mines, and one of them had, as we discovered,
+a very certain investment at the disposal of the Duke, in the form of a
+mining-claim, which was worth, at the lowest computation, twice as much
+as he was willing to take for it. There was no reason to doubt his good
+faith, but it was felt that it was a kind of fortune which ought not to
+pass into the hands of strangers, and should be reserved for the people
+of the country; and I am sure all of the party who had the pleasure of
+the owner's acquaintance hope that he has "made his pile" out of it,
+and has more than realised his expectations.
+
+Colorado Springs, forty-five miles from Pueblo, is nearly 6000 feet
+above the level of the sea. The character of the line to it is best
+described in the fact that the average grade per mile is 44·14, the
+maximum curvature 6°. There are "no Springs" here, but the little town,
+charmingly situated, is a halting-place much frequented in tourist-time
+by travellers, and reputed to be healthful. There are some pleasant
+houses visible from the station, at which we descended to take our
+places in the carriages provided to take us to Manitou Springs, five
+miles away. Mr. Palmer--if General, I beg his pardon--the President of
+the Railroad, had important business to attend to, but he was so well
+represented by Mr. Bell, the Vice-President, that no one regretted his
+absence, and it cannot be said in his case _les absents ont toujours
+tort_. He is reported to have made a very large fortune with much
+ingenuity, and to have business talents which even in this country
+excite admiration. Mr. Bell is an Irish gentleman, a member of the
+medical profession, who has a delightful villa embowered in a garden
+in the environs of Manitou, where the Duke and his friends found a
+charming interior and an Irish-American welcome, and discovered that
+strawberries and cream were almost as good in Colorado as in Covent
+Garden. A quaint, odd place, Manitou--an American Martigny, with
+Pike's Peak rising (14,300 feet above the sea) over it in the clear
+sky, inspiring regret that we could not make the excursion to the
+summit, which is rewarded, we were told, and I can believe, by one of
+the grandest views in the world--the usual service of guides, horses,
+and mules, and _calèches_--a naturalist's store with skins, minerals,
+feathers, and stuffed "objects"--detached wooden houses and villas
+in small plots of garden--a straggling street, and large hotels for
+invalids. But there was the unusual feature of encampments here and
+there by the roadside, and notices forbidding the pitching of tents
+within certain limits which were explained by the fact that the high
+reputation of the waters and air induces people to come from great
+distances for the treatment of consumption, and diseases of throat and
+lungs. Many of them find it cheaper to travel in horse waggons and
+pitch their canvas dwellings when they wish to make a halt, than to
+take up their quarters at hotels. Poor people! what pale, hectic cheeks
+and wasted forms we saw; little groups picnicking by the sides of the
+rivulets along the roads--each with a gnawing care--anxiety about some
+dear one's health in the midst of them. Our driver, an intelligent,
+chatty lad, was full of information, and we had to drive the prescribed
+road by the wells out to the Ute Pass, a mountain-gorge wild enough--a
+small _Tête Noire_--to points to which magniloquent names have been
+given.
+
+It is not for want of what is called puffing that Americans neglect
+the resorts of health of their own country, and in the States far and
+wide the beauties and advantages of Manitou are blazoned forth on the
+walls of hotels and in guide-books to all who can read. I may confess
+now that, notwithstanding the magnificent altitude of Pike's Peak, and
+the eccentric forms of the rocks in the "Garden of the Gods," I was
+disappointed with Manitou. But then the visit was short, and the day
+was hot, and the way was long and dusty, and haply it might be that
+under different circumstances Manitou would deserve much warmer praise.
+It possesses indeed an abundance of curious springs, said to be full
+of health-giving properties; and in the course of our drive we halted
+several times to partake of drinks from various springs, out of one of
+which bubbled up very good soda-water, precisely like Schweppe's best
+in taste and appearance. At the large hotel, which put one in mind of
+the great establishments of the same sort in Switzerland, the water
+served at table to the guests--a sort of pleasant Apollinaris-tasting
+beverage--came from a natural fountain.
+
+The "cataract" nearly made us angry, and there was no regret felt when
+the carriages returned to the hotel, where there was unwonted activity
+and bustle, as the "Denver Zouaves" had just descended in a friendly
+razzia on it, and were desolating the hearts and fireside resources of
+Manitou. The consequences might have been serious, as it turned out,
+to unoffending strangers. Those who needed it turned into the barber's
+shop of the hotel to be shaved, and after some delay a coloured man
+appeared, who began to try his hand on me. Fortunately it was not
+'prentice, for it was very unsteady, and I became a little alarmed
+for my cuticle. "It will be all right, mister," quoth the barber. "I
+never cut any one. But I'm demoralised, dat's a fact, having to wait
+on dem Denver Zouaves. Lor a messy on any enemy dey has! My nerve's
+all gone to pieces wid their wantin' everting at once at the dinner!"
+The hotel seemed far more clean and comfortable than the caravanserais
+in the land of William Tell; but our stay was short, for we were put
+under orders for a sight which has the most inappropriate name that
+could be invented--a valley in which the most extraordinary-looking
+columns carved out in a plateau by the agency of water, have been
+left standing, detached and in groups, to which the visitor enters
+through a cleft in a barrier of rock passing round the base of a pillar
+of sandstone as high as a house. The "Garden of the Gods" contains
+500 acres, and is surrounded by mountains and cliffs. The sandstone
+pillars generally taper from the base upwards to a short distance from
+the tops, which are flattened out or surmounted by slabs or blocks of
+sandstone of fantastic outline, and they are called by names derived
+from fancied likenesses to animals, birds, and men. The juxtaposition
+of the most brilliantly hued, dazzling-red blocks and strata, with
+masses of the same material of milky whiteness, gives the impression
+that the scene is the work of human hands; it seems too quaint and
+artificial for the hand of Nature, to which alone it is due; and the
+vegetation and the trees are in keeping with the character of the
+place. A trysting-place for geologists, and their happy hunting-ground,
+no doubt. But why "the Garden of the Gods," I pray?
+
+From the valley or cup, emerging by another road, the driver took us to
+a ravine-like recess, almost girt in by high wooded mountains, in which
+Mr. (General?) Palmer is erecting a mansion of palatial importance--a
+picturesque site surely--cliffs, forests, and mountain all around, and
+in view one most singular sandstone pillar, named the Major Domo, 120
+feet high and only 30 feet round--a mountain stream brawling through
+tangled brushwood glades--a garden. But the heat! That must prove a
+terror by day to the inmates of Glen Eyrie Lodge or Castle--which, by
+the by, was named, as one of us insisted, from a collection of rubbish
+on a ledge in the face of one of the cliffs, which was, he maintained,
+the nest of an eagle. It was now time to return to our train, and we
+were not sorry to get back to Colorado Springs.
+
+From Colorado Springs to our destination at Denver there were still 75
+miles of rail, and the line continued to ascend till we reached Divide
+(7186 feet), whence there was a gentle descent. There were sixteen
+stations named on the time-table. We stopped at very few of them,
+and travelled somewhat too fast to permit our placid enjoyment of the
+scenery, austere and vast, which indeed deserved more attention than
+could be given to it by passengers in a very lively train--endless
+alps on alps, not sheeted with perpetual white, but rather flecked
+with snowfields, which contrasted finely with the sombre pine-forests,
+and the rich hues of the rocks, touched by the rays of the setting
+sun, that, ere it slid behind the mountains, cast a rose-coloured
+mantle on their summit. The evidences of a bustling city were not
+wanting in the approaches to the capital of Colorado. There were tall
+chimneys vomiting out smoke in the distance, and near at hand trains
+of waggons were toiling over the dusty plain--still 5000 feet above
+the sea-level--fast trotters and people on horseback, beer-gardens,
+factories of all kinds, brick-kilns, and then a fringe of log houses
+and wooden shanties, before the train stopped at the imposing and
+substantial depot.
+
+It was a quarter-past eight, nearly dark, when we reached Denver,
+and glad were we to get into the hall of the Windsor Hotel, which was
+crowded with a mixed multitude--miners, and speculators, and traders,
+and some travellers like ourselves--a very busy scene indeed. In the
+hotel were all human comforts nearly; hot and cold baths, and good
+rooms, and more appliances of civilised existence, for those who could
+pay for them, than could be found in many hostelries of approved
+reputation in venerable towns at home; moreover, exuberant offers
+of help and information. One goes to bed laden with obligations and
+heavy with the sense of favours which can never be repaid. There was
+now a _soupçon_ of frost in the air, and notwithstanding the heat
+which we had endured the greater part of the day, fires were not
+ungrateful; and as we peered out of our windows over the roofs of the
+wide-spread houses of the town, we could see the snow on the lofty
+ranges of hills, watered by the South Platte River and Cherry Creek,
+which surround the cup in which Denver has been built in obedience
+to the impulses of the increasing population, which now numbers, I
+believe, 38,000 souls. There was a bright glare from the gas-lighted
+streets, sounds of music, and a tumult of life in the town which
+would have been creditable to an ancient metropolis. In the morning
+from the hotel windows appeared a beautiful and widespread panorama
+of the hills we had seen the evening before, peak above peak, none
+very densely covered perhaps, or presenting continuous snowfields, but
+extending in billowy sweeps far away to the horizon, all capped with
+snow, now bathed in a flood of fervent sunshine, the snow lighted up
+by the peculiar crimson tints common in Alpine regions. There were
+duties in the way of sight-seeing and exploration of no ordinary
+nature to be done. First there were interviews and receptions, and the
+inevitable drive through the place as soon as the ordeal of breakfast
+was over; and ordeal in some sort it was for the strangers to file
+in to the public room and take their places at their table, aware
+that the morning papers had subjected them to exhaustive criticism,
+which was being verified by those around us. The morning papers too
+had given some topics for reflection, indications that in the newly
+created capital of Colorado desperate men, overtaken by the march of
+law and order, had refused to accept service, and were vindicating
+their rights as wild western outcasts to take or part with life as
+of yore, in reckless encounters and deliberate assassinations. There
+were, perhaps, at that moment some hundreds, if not thousands, out of
+the population of 37,000 or 38,000 of the city, who belonged to the
+adventurous classes--sporting-men, betting-men, ring-men, bar-keepers,
+hell-proprietors, and their satellites, and the scum of the saloons
+attracted from the great cities of the States for hundreds of miles,
+by the prey which miners with belts full of gold, half mad with drink,
+and always fond of excitement, frequently are; and if to these be added
+the dissolute loafers and broken-down mining speculators, the strength
+of the army arrayed against the law may be estimated; and the wonder is
+that among a population armed to the teeth there are not more cases of
+such violent deeds as we were reading of at breakfast. To the stranger
+there was no evidence of the existence of these disturbing elements,
+unless the bearded and booted men with speculation in their eyes,
+in the hotel passages and halls, belonged to the dangerous, as they
+certainly did to the mining, classes. As to the resources of the city,
+although for rapidity of growth its wonders may be eclipsed by those of
+Leadville, Denver claims a very high place in the catalogue of these
+marvellous fungi of civilisation, of which the Western States present
+almost unique examples. There is everything that any one can want to be
+had for money in the place, and much more than most people need. Paris
+fashions and millinery are in vogue. There are fine shops, handsome
+churches, a theatre, breweries, factories, banks, insurance offices.
+
+The principal street exhibits pretty young people, who would have
+no occasion to fear comparison with the _beau monde_ in Eastern
+or European capitals. The thoroughfares are crowded with vehicles,
+and spruce carriages and well turned-out horses may be seen in the
+favourite drive, that has been made over an indifferent road to the
+base of the Rocky Mountains, which appear to be close at hand, though
+they are thirteen miles away. But here and there in the well-dressed
+crowd may be seen a Bohemian _pur sang_, or a miner in his every day
+clothes, bent on a rig out and a good time of it. The streets, unpaved,
+dusty, and rugged, are very wide, and bordered with trees, and the
+houses generally are built of good red brick instead of wood; and
+there are runnels of water like those one sees in Pretoria and other
+Dutch towns in South Africa. The roads about the city leave much to be
+desired; but Rome was not built in a day.
+
+There are many ready-made clothing establishments in the main streets,
+and there is a heavy trade in tinned provisions. Through the Western
+States, as in South Africa, the débris of provision-tins constitutes
+a certain and considerable addition to the objects to be seen in the
+vicinity of every house, and to the mounds of rubbish in the street of
+every village. How indeed could the first-comers in such regions keep
+body and soul together without the supplies in such a portable form
+of the first necessaries of life? Having once run up a town in these
+remote wastes, the inhabitants are still compelled to make a liberal
+use of the same sort of food, and mines of tinned iron gradually
+accumulate around them.
+
+Our first excursion was to the Argo Works, under very pleasant
+auspices, for we had the wife of the Senator, who is one of the
+principal partners, and Mrs. Pearce, whose husband is largely
+interested in the works, taking charge of us. The works are at some
+distance outside the town, but the lofty chimneys vomit out quite
+sufficient vaporous fumes and smoke to blight the vegetation and to
+give the people near at hand a taste of their quality. I am not going
+to give a minute description, for more reasons than one, of what we saw
+at the works; but it was a very interesting exhibition of the processes
+by which the precious metals are extracted from the ores and delivered
+to commerce. The Argo Works simply assay and reduce ores on commission,
+but the business is on a very large scale. Immense piles, in fact small
+mountains, of brown, cinnamon and earth coloured dust and rock were
+heaped up in the sheds, to be brought to the furnaces and turned, when
+divested of the lead, iron, copper, and gold, out in ingots of silver.
+All the methods for the extraction of silver were shown to us, but
+I committed a gross indiscretion when I asked, in my ignorance, "How
+do you extract the gold?" "That," said the urbane gentleman who was
+conducting us over the works, "we never permit strangers to see." So
+there is more there than meets the eye.
+
+The business of assaying here must be profitable, and if the reputation
+of any firm be once established there is a secure fortune for its
+members. The miners flock to them, and they can dictate terms. The
+extent of mining work in the country around may be inferred from the
+numerous offices in connection with it in the city. As a specimen
+of what Messrs. Bush and Tabor of our hotel give their guests for
+dinner, let me offer you this _menu_ of the 5.30 ordinary to-day
+(June 16). Soup, beef à l'Anglaise; fish, boiled trout, anchovy sauce;
+corned beef, leg of mutton, sirloin beef, chickens with giblet sauce,
+fricassee à la Toulouse, veal, kidneys sautés aux croûtons, rice,
+croquettes, baked pork and beans, saddle of antelope, currant jelly,
+lamb, tongue, chicken salad, spiced salmon; innumerable "relishes" and
+vegetables, baked rice pudding, strawberry pie, apricot pie, jelly,
+blancmange, vanilla ice cream, macaroons, pound cake, fruit, Swiss
+cheese, nuts, coffee, &c. The wines were not cheap: champagne 16_s._ a
+bottle, St. Julien 6_s._, Leoville 14_s._, sherry 8_s._, brandy 14_s._
+per bottle. Orders for "drinks" at the bar after dinner were much more
+general than orders for wine at dinner.
+
+Denver, in spite of its mineral wealth, is very poor, however, in
+that of which the want would make life, even in America, intolerable.
+The supply of drinking-water is scanty and bad, and last year there
+was nearly a water famine. The _cartes_ in the hotel announced "Water
+used in this room is boiled and filtered." But great efforts have been
+made to furnish the inhabitants with a store, constant and adequate,
+of the precious fluid, and we saw very considerable works, the
+property of an Irish gentleman, erected before the town attained its
+present dimensions, which were to be supplemented by a new enterprise
+respecting which we heard much. Perhaps no town of equal size in an
+equal length of time has ever had so much money and money's worth
+flowing in and through it as Denver since the Colorado mines were
+worked. It is asserted that the trade of the town for 1881 will exceed
+8,000,000_l._ Colorado in 1879 yielded ores to the value of more than
+3,750,000_l._ The output in the present year will exceed that of 1880.
+In that year $35,417,517 worth of gold and $20,183,889 of silver (more
+than 11,000,000_l._) was deposited in the United States Mint and Assay
+Office. There is, besides, vast wealth in flocks and herds, and Denver
+is the place where the people resort from Colorado for purposes of
+trade and pleasure; altogether an astounding place, with a future quite
+dazzling to think of, unless the mines give in, and even then Colorado
+cannot again be poor; its climate and scenery will always attract
+travellers, and its capacity for feeding sheep and cattle will secure
+its population. "And as to the beetle?" Why, no one would have anything
+to say to it. Nothing was known of it. There might be such things in
+other States. "And the name?" Probably it was a red-coloured bug, and
+got the name Colorado just as the river, or tobacco, was called, from
+the hue of it. At all events the bug did not belong to the State.
+
+The interest which the progress of Colorado and the condition of
+society in the State excite was exemplified by the appearance in
+Denver of a party of Hungarian noblemen, whose names gave occasion
+for stumbling to the journalists who copied them out of the Hotel
+Register--Count Andrassy and others, who were travelling under the
+guidance of Dr. Rudolf Meyer, of Vienna. Although the air of Denver
+is so much bepraised, it happens that most of our party felt rather
+overcome at the end of our excursion through the town and the visit
+to the smelting works, and one of the Hungarians was confined to his
+room. However, they sallied out before dinner, and a gloomy prophet
+of evil remarked, "If these strangers should have a difficulty, I
+consider they'll hev only theirselves to blame. Some citizens don't
+like strangers comin' in and starin' at them, and they're apt to be
+awkward in their tempers in the afternoon." Knowing no danger, and
+fearing none, they went off, and were a long time absent. Meantime we
+were preparing for the road, as we were bound for Leadville, the city
+of the "biggest boom" of mining times--"the Silver El Dorado," as the
+guide-book, with a magnificent "bull," describes it. Our Hungarian
+friends returned to the hotel ere we left. They were filled with
+enthusiasm, and with a good deal also of curiosity in regard to the
+shootings of which they had heard so much, and were following in our
+track next day, and so we parted _sans adieux_. How the love of gold
+has filled these lone valleys with desperate men! "They are a rough
+lot, sure enough," said the landlord, "but lynching keeps them down;
+and it is much better than hanging according to law, to my mind. It
+certainly is cheaper." "How is it cheaper?" "Why," said he, "when a man
+is prosecuted, or when he is tried before the judges, the law expenses
+are heavy, and they fall on the county. When a man is lynched there is
+only the expense of the rope, and a little loss of time for the boys
+who do the job." From Denver to Pueblo and from Pueblo to Leadville
+the line is on the narrow-gauge principle, and our train, which left
+at seven o'clock in the evening, seemed to be driven on no principle at
+all; for, anxious to astonish a Duke perhaps, or Britishers generally,
+the driver did what certainly could not be called his level best to
+send us along up and down a very rough line, and round the sharpest
+curves, at the rate of forty miles an hour, so that when we turned
+in, our rest, if rest at all it were, was exceedingly broken, and
+we trundled about in our berths as if we were in a ship in a pretty
+heavy sea. Still this narrow-gauge was the only line which could be
+made through such a country as we were traversing. Peeps out of the
+window ever and anon revealed, high up amongst the stars, rugged
+mountain-tops, and for ever there came the sound of rushing water,
+near or remote, as the train "bounded" on its course. I do not know
+what stations we passed on our way, but the night was very long, and
+I greeted with pleasure the first gleam of light above the hill-tops.
+The Arkansas River was on our left, and at dawn we had glimpses of
+its turbid stream running madly in deep gorges far below us. At the
+South Arkansas station the train halted soon after daybreak, and then
+we diverged from the main line, and a light train took us over the
+Arkansas River by a fine bridge on its way up the Gunnison Extension
+to visit the highest mountain-pass traversed by a railway in the
+world. South Arkansas station is 217 miles from Denver, and is 6944
+feet--and Marshall Pass (25 miles away), to which we were bound, is
+10,760 feet--above sea-level. There were grades of 211 and curves of
+24° on the way, and the railroad twisted in and out among the ravines
+like an iron Alexandrine, for ever ascending till we had passed the
+limits of forest life. There were stations at short intervals--Poncha
+Springs, Mears, Silver Creek--from each other. From the stations there
+is a good deal of cross-country traffic, and at one place we saw three
+stages laden with men and women--or rather, to be polite and accurate,
+let me say with women and ladies--starting, one with six horses, and
+the other two with four each. These were bound for Gunnison, and as
+we were halting for a little, the Duke and some others got out of the
+train, and sauntered up towards the wooden shanties which formed "the
+town," consisting of the usual array of saloons and drinking places.
+However, our course was cut short by the information vouchsafed by one
+of the officials, that it might be as well not to go up, as there had
+been a big shooting match that morning, and that one man was killed
+and four had been wounded, "and some of them were on the drink yet."
+From 4.30 A.M. to 6.45 A.M. we struggled up towards the pass till
+the line came to an end near the summit, and we were rewarded by some
+very fine views, exceedingly like those of the Mont Cenis Railway or
+the Sömmering. The hills on both sides of the line were stippled and
+flaked with snow, but there was no extensive field, so far as the eye
+could see, nor was there any appearance whatever of a glacier, the tops
+generally being clear of snow, which only lodged in the ravines and
+hollows. Strange it was in these alpine heights to hear the clang of
+Italian tongues; but most of the navvies were from Italy, and if not
+quite so strong as English or Americans, they were in more favour with
+contractors, because they did more work, owing to their steadiness and
+sobriety. The line was being pushed on at an astonishing rate, and one
+man was pointed out to us who had laid four and a half miles of railway
+in one day, "the biggest thing of the kind ever done." Our enjoyment
+of the scenery was very much diminished by our animal appetites,
+stimulated by the sharp mountain air, which craved incessantly for
+food. But not even a cup of coffee was to be had until we got back to
+the South Arkansas station, late in the morning, where an excellent
+breakfast awaited us. Here we were detained some time by a derailment
+of an engine in front.
+
+From South Arkansas station to Leadville (61 miles) the railroad is
+still more aspiring. The higher we ascend the less striking are the
+scenic effects, but the grades are not very severe till we come to
+Malta, where it reaches 130; from Hilliers to Leadville the maximum is
+176, the curves being often 15°. The general character of the country
+may be conceived from these figures, but no words can convey any idea
+of the wholesale destruction of timber which has marked the progress
+of the explorers and prospectors. Where the axe was weary the blaze
+and the fire were called in, and hundreds of miles of forest are laid
+in blackened ruin. At last we are on a level with the hill-tops.
+There, on the hill-tops and in the valleys of a sterile region in
+front of you, amidst those tall chimneys vomiting out smoke and steam,
+is a wilderness of wooden huts, "the Great Carbonate Camp"--where we
+leave the train--spread out over an undulating plateau, broken into
+mound-like hills and sharp hillocks--bustling streets filled with the
+most remarkable swarm of all nations that ever settled on any one spot
+in the world. The story of Leadville reads like a chapter out of some
+book of Oriental fable. It is a huge barrack of wooden houses, with
+some solid and important buildings, with masses of tree-stumps cropping
+up in the centre of the main thoroughfares, pitched over an undulating,
+rugged, dusty ledge. In the midst of blocks of houses sprout up the
+chimneys of furnaces and mining works, the clang of machinery fills
+the air, which is thick with clouds of dust. It was a few years ago an
+utterly wild, lifeless waste amidst the mountains covered with forests,
+when three brothers, named Gallagher, exploring from California, were
+led by some genius, good or bad, to test the material of the rocks in
+the ravine. They struck gold ore, and silver too, and they set up a
+claim; and presently they sold their shares in the land which they had
+appropriated, for 40,000_l._, which they divided. Two used their wealth
+wisely, and made more of it, and, taking to themselves the members of
+the family, throve exceedingly; one, not so wise, if he were quite as
+good, did not prosper as well as his brothers. But the scene of their
+operations was soon swarming with enterprising miners. There was a
+mighty "boom." Now there is a city! Leadville is, I think, the most
+astonishing city on earth, but I am not by any means inclined to say
+that it is a place I should like to be astonished about for more than
+a few hours.
+
+The party drove to the Morning Star, said to be the best mine in
+Leadville; and the Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry Green, and others, went
+down the mine in miners' clothes or cloaks. Two others, whose names I
+shall not give, remained above, and had, I fancy, the best of the time.
+Afterwards we visited Grant's Smelting Works, and then back to the
+Clarence Hotel and dined, strolling out afterwards through the town and
+visiting the billiard saloons, the Grand Central Theatre, and finally,
+where we were told Leadville life was to be seen in all its glory, the
+faro and the kino tables, which, however, were doing but very little
+business, as it was not until after midnight that play in the town
+generally commenced. Instead of sleeping at the hotel, we resolved
+to take refuge in the train, which was drawn up at the siding; and we
+had to drive in order to reach it, as it was considered unsafe to walk
+through the streets in the dark.
+
+We started at four o'clock next morning, June 18th, and on arriving
+at Arkansas Station learned that an engine was off the line in front
+of us. Breakdown gangs were sent for, and all the locomotive talent
+amongst our passengers repaired quickly to the scene. As it was not
+easy to lift the engine, the engineers adopted the expedient of laying
+a temporary rail to turn its flank so as to enable us to pass round
+it, which we did after a delay of about an hour. The Duke got out and
+sat on the cow-catcher by way of a change. But the interest we took in
+the scenery was somewhat diminished by the intelligence that the delay
+caused by the engine would prevent our enjoying the "soda bath" we had
+been promised at Cañon City, and the sight of the State Prison, where
+murderers were to be paraded by the dozen. About twenty miles north
+of the Grand Cañon, the gorges through which the river runs became
+wider and deeper. All that has been written about the Grand Cañon
+utterly fails to convey an adequate idea of its exceeding grandeur
+and wildness. The rocks--closing in so that the spectator in the car,
+looking forward, thinks the progress of the train must be arrested,
+and that it is not possible for it to get out of the _cul de sac_ which
+appears in front, rising aloft for upwards of two thousand five hundred
+feet on each side--are coloured with the brightest hues, and present an
+infinite variety of form. The impetuous current of the Arkansas River,
+contracted at times to the breadth of some twenty or thirty yards,
+and penned into a space in which the waters boil and toss as if about
+to leap on and submerge the passing cars, roars wildly down below on
+our right at a depth varying as the line rises and falls. But it is
+at the Bridge--a triumph of engineering skill--that the horrors of
+the pass culminate. The sides of the ravine approach so near that the
+daring engineer was enabled to execute the idea of lowering from above
+a [**triangle]-shaped frame or trestle of iron; and, the ends catching
+on each side of the gorge, permitted him to work on it for the
+construction of the iron platform over which the train is carried at a
+height of some hundreds of feet right over the maddened river. You can
+look down through the interstices of the girders and glance shudderingly
+at the hell of waters below--a sight and sensation never to be
+forgotten. The ravine gradually expands and the cliffs recede as the
+line strikes eastwards; and though the scenery retains a wild and
+savage character for many miles farther, the impressions of the Grand
+Cañon caused us to regard it with comparative indifference. We heard
+many tales of the great railway war which was waged for the possession
+of the pass, of which traces still remained in the ruins of posts of
+vantage and observation, and the works of the defeated railroad
+visible on the other side of the ravine. At night we reached Pueblo
+and took up our quarters in our own cars, and continued our journey,
+after some delay, towards Kansas City.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of Travel--A
+ Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to New York.
+
+
+_June 19th._--Still on the rolling prairies; in the country of
+compulsory abstinence--the paradise of Sir Wilfred Lawson. At 9.30
+A.M. the train stopped at Newton, 431 miles from Pueblo, and 281 from
+Kansas.
+
+Here a phenomenon--there was a man by the road side who walked with
+unsteady step, whose legs tottered, and who lurched violently as he
+came down the road at that early hour. "He is a sick man," observed
+one of my friends in the train; "that gentleman has been taking
+_medicine_." In the Kansas Act there is a clause enabling physicians,
+in case of need, to order stimulants for the patients without penalty;
+but I am told the doctors have generally refused to act upon that
+permission, so I suppose our friend had been consulting an unlicensed
+practitioner.
+
+It would be ill done, when I am anxious to acknowledge the pleasure
+and profit which I derived from my passage through the State, if I
+did not record the satisfaction with which I perused a volume of the
+"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science," which by accident I
+picked up at one of the stations. The very name speaks trumpet-tongued
+for the progress which has been made in this wild region. The year
+before last, the twelfth annual meeting of the Academy was held in
+Topeka, and I find amongst the list of papers read such subjects
+as these:--The Kansas Lepidoptera; Kansas Minerals; the Mounds of
+Southern Kansas; Recent additions to Kansas Plants; Kansas Botany;
+Kansas Meteorites; Phonetic representations of Indian Language;
+Sinkholes; Elementary Sounds of Language; Mound-builders; On Recent
+Indian Discoveries. And among the lecturers there was Professor B.
+F. Mudge, who died last year, whose name probably is known to a very
+limited number of scientific men outside the University of Kansas.
+Generally the papers contributed by the gentlemen of the State attest
+industry and attainments which make their praise of the Professor
+particularly valuable. It is curious enough to pick up in a railway
+carriage, traversing such a scene of comparative wildness and vast
+uninhabited plains in Western Kansas, an exceedingly interesting
+examination of the Helmholtz theories of sight. The object of the
+lecturer would scarcely be suspected by the reader. We had already
+been struck by the extraordinary absence of signalmen, or of any
+of the complex apparatus of men and machinery which may be seen in
+Europe, and notably in England, to report the progress of trains
+on the lines. Collisions, however, occur in America where these
+precautions are not taken, and the lecturer attributed a good deal of
+these accidents to colour-blindness, which appears to have attracted
+considerable attention in the United States. Surgeons, pilots, &c.,
+are tested for colour, and in the army colour-blindness disqualifies
+the recruit for employment in the signal corps. Altogether the papers
+give an impression that in this new State there are diligent students
+of natural history and physics, and profound inquirers into all the
+phenomena of life. There was a reverse to the medal.
+
+At a station where the train halted beyond Pueblo, a card was handed
+to me by one of the stewards. "The gentleman is, as he seemed very
+pressing, outside; but I told him you were engaged." I started
+as I read the name and address on the card, as well I might. They
+indicated that an old friend whom I had left in a condition of great
+bodily weakness and infirmity in London, was close at hand in this
+remote region--a wonderful if welcome fly in amber. I ran out of the
+drawing-room into the next car, and there saw a man, agitated and
+travel-worn, whom I had never, to the best of my belief, seen in my
+life before. His story was told, if not soon, at least in time to
+let me partly understand the situation ere the train moved off. The
+stranger had been in the service of the gentleman whose card he sent in
+to me, but had left it to better himself in America, and had gone out
+as valet to an American of good position at Colorado Springs. He found,
+however, according to his own account, that he was expected to do
+things not required of a valet in his own country, such as lumbering,
+wood-cutting, and the like, and so he had thrown up his situation
+and was going back to England. He had had quite enough of Colorado
+Springs. "I was not there above a month, and I was shot at twice," he
+said. "Once because I made some remark in a bar-room, where a chap was
+abusing Englishmen; and another time while I was speaking in the street
+to a man a fellow had a grudge against. He fired at him across the
+road, and the ball whistled within a hair's-breadth of my head." He had
+arrived at Pueblo some time before our special, and as the morning was
+warm, he walked into a bar near the platform, while the engine of his
+train was watering, to get a glass of lemonade. As he was drinking it,
+a man walked in and called for a glass of whisky, putting down, at the
+same time, what seemed to be a bank note, on the counter. The boniface
+said, "I haven't got change for this twenty-dollar bill--perhaps this
+gentleman can oblige you." The unsuspecting Briton, who had put the
+money for his passage to Liverpool in a purse, drew it out to change
+the note, and the strange customer at once seized it from his hand,
+and rushed off towards the street with his booty. The Britisher ran
+after him, but checked his wild career when he saw, within an inch of
+his head, the muzzle of a revolver which the robber had drawn, and the
+fellow vanished. "Won't you help me to stop the thief; you see what has
+happened?" exclaimed the victim turning to the barman. "I guess there
+was no money in that purse, sir. And if there was, perhaps you had no
+more right to it than he had." Then the Briton dashed off after Don
+Guzman, shouting "police," and was at once accosted by an officer of
+the Pueblo force. He hurriedly stated the facts. The policeman smiled.
+"I think you won't see that pile agin," he remarked; "and if you
+don't look sharp ye'll miss yer train, that's a fact!" The man had his
+railway ticket all right, a few dollars in his pocket, and I told him
+I would see him and get him a passage, if I found on inquiry his story
+was true. My companions thought the tale suspicious--but I believe it
+was true, and I subsequently franked the man to England.
+
+Now here we had an exemplification of the manners and customs of
+the district. Such an act of violence and robbery might occur in
+London--anywhere. But what of the apathy, or perhaps complicity, of the
+bar man? And if it or they be considered not altogether abnormal, is
+the conduct of the policeman to be accepted as quite consistent with
+the discharge of a policeman's duty? Well, whilst I was pondering on
+these things, there came to me the best possible adviser--a judge in
+this Israel--our excellent Palinurus, Mr. White. He threw a new, if not
+a side light on the subject. "Depend on it he is a confidence man. The
+trains are full of them! Our conductors have express orders about the
+rascals." And he explained that a confidence man is a swindler--very
+often an Englishman, who makes it his business to look out for unwary
+strangers, on whom he imposes with some tale of distress, or some
+recital of imaginary misfortune and adventure. As the man I had seen
+was coming on in the train in our wake, Mr. White promised to talk with
+the conductor, and find out, if he could, the truth about the Pueblo
+robbery. Before dusk a telegram was forwarded by him to me from the
+station where he left us, to say that the conductor had no doubt the
+man was robbed, but that it was partly his own fault, and to warn me to
+be cautious in my dealings with him.
+
+We have now been travelling straight on end for 1160 miles, with only
+two engineers and two firemen and one engine, a feat of endurance
+which has greatly exercised the Duke of Sutherland, who, as a practical
+director of the London and North-Western Railway, has knowledge of such
+matters, and who contrasts the performance with the experience he has
+on the home lines, where engines, engineers, and firemen would have
+been relieved or laid up over and over again. The head engineer of the
+line, who joined us, Mr. Hackney, formerly of Congleton, had become
+accustomed to these journeyings and endurances, which were brought to
+the front in our conversation by the engine-driver appearing at the
+door of the carriage to claim a dollar which he had won from the Duke
+in a bet that he could not do the distance without laying up the engine
+for repairs.
+
+All the long Sabbath-day we travelled on through the prairie, catching
+glimpses now and then of wooden villages, around which trees were
+beginning to sprout up, and of the little churches with knots of carts,
+waggons, horses, and buggies outside, and people waiting for the end
+of the sermon. Now and then, perhaps at intervals of fifteen miles or
+so, are places of larger importance, such as Emporia, a rising city on
+the plains, where many steeples pointed aloft indicated considerable
+diversity of creed. An authority, not always to be relied upon, stated
+that there are fourteen churches belonging to the town.
+
+There was a parting symposium in the second Pullman ere we reached
+Topeka. Mr. White, Major Anderson, General Brown, Mr. Jerome, and
+my much wandering compatriot, a veritable Irish Ulysses, raised the
+tuneful melodies of the "Golden Slipper," the "Little Brown Jug," and
+the other tender psalmodies which had whiled away so many hours, for
+the last time in our society, and the little gages which were but the
+outward and visible signs of the regard we felt for our friends were
+exchanged with honest effusion. There may be--nay, there are--many
+jealousies and causes of estrangement between the people of the Old
+Country and of the New, but between the individuals of both there is a
+_camaraderie_ which cannot, I believe, be found between Englishmen and
+the natives of any country except America.
+
+"Good bye! God bless you! Be sure if ever you come to England you shall
+have a hearty welcome from me." "And from me!" "And me!" "And me!" The
+engine bell tolled, and we moved slowly on.
+
+And we were left all alone! The pleasant companions of so many weeks
+had gone! I wonder if they missed us as much as we missed them?
+
+While travelling across the Rockies and the desert to San Francisco
+and back, our course of life was pretty uniform, and one day followed
+another with almost perfect resemblance in the mode of existence and
+in all things except the scenery and the country through which we
+were passing. First, in the early morning came one of the attendants
+to our bedside with a cup of coffee, and then the curtains of the
+little cubicle were thrown aside and you looked out on either plain,
+or mountain, or river, or col; and on the faces of early risers at
+doors or windows as the train passed through some rising town. At one
+end of the saloon there was a bath-room, and from the tank there was
+always to be obtained sufficient water for the purpose of an early
+dip, which was enjoyed as occasion offered in turn by the party. Then
+a cigarette. Then we dropped in as people do at a country house, into
+the sitting-room, and exchanged ideas as to the progress made during
+the night, and the stoppages, wondered where we were, and had a little
+conversation with the conductor or Arthur as to the place where we
+could stop or get the papers--and so got over the morning till 9
+o'clock, when breakfast was announced, consisting of fish, poultry,
+meat, fruit (I had nearly said flowers, for there was always a bouquet
+on the table), tea, coffee, and cold dishes, with abundance of milk
+and butter. Where the fish came from and how they were kept fresh was
+matter of wonder, for the instances were very rare in which there was
+any indication that it had not quite recently come out of the sea or
+the river. The supply of ice was liberal and unfailing, and whenever
+we stopped at any considerable station the whole disposable strength
+of the attendants in the train was employed in grappling with large
+blocks of it and stowing it away in the ice reservoir, in which were
+the larder and the cellar for such wines as needed cooling, and for
+the vegetables and meat, of which there were great stores constantly
+laid in. Then after breakfast there was reading or sight-seeing,
+investigating the line, examining the maps, receiving visits and
+returning them in other parts of the train, till in the very hot days
+it was necessary, after expelling the flies, which were troublesome on
+occasion, to draw the dust-blinds and the curtains of the carriages,
+to mitigate the fierceness of the sun. It was objected occasionally
+that by this process we deprived ourselves of the opportunity of
+what was called "seeing the country," but after all a glance now
+and then is quite sufficient to reveal the general character of the
+districts through which the train is running; and the most diligent and
+painstaking observer cannot keep his eyes fixed steadily for a day on
+the external aspects of the region through which he is travelling. I
+should be sorry to declare that every one was wide awake all the time
+of the forenoon and up to the period of lunch, which too often exceeded
+on the side of many dishes, being, in fact, a mid-day dinner; but then
+no one was obliged to eat more than he liked, or drink either. Then
+came the longest stretch of the day, and at its close another banquet;
+and as the sun declined and the temperature decreased, we could take
+more pleasure in looking out at the fantastic forms of the vegetation
+which clothed the arid rocks in the desert, or on the bright green
+prairie, or on the towering mountains, waiting till the sun had set,
+generally in a blaze of glory. There were, of course, interruptions and
+variations as we halted at the more important places; disappointments
+about letters which had been telegraphed for and which were expected
+day after day, constituted also a matter of conversation and discourse.
+There was an harmonium in the sitting-room of the palace car, but
+no one had the art of playing it, although we had plenty of music of
+another sort; for after dinner the gentlemen of the railroad party who
+had not dined with us came in, and we were never tired of listening to
+the songs, so original and amusing, which they gave with great spirit
+and admirable time and tune, for it happened they all possessed good
+voices, and the melodies with which the troops of coloured minstrels
+have now rendered the world familiar were then new to us.
+
+During the whole of our tour the weather has been most favourable.
+With the exception of the rainy days in Canada, and the cold and
+rawness which characterised the time of our short visit to Richmond,
+there was nothing worse to complain of than continual sunshine. Now
+and then the temperature was a little too good to be pleasant when we
+were traversing the beds of the dry seas in the desert in Colorado and
+California, but that was something to look back upon with satisfaction,
+because there was no time lost in keeping within doors owing to the
+rain and storm or cold. "Within doors," however, is a phrase scarcely
+applicable to our mode of life, as it would imply that we were in
+stable habitations, whereas, as will have been seen by those who
+have accompanied us so far, we "lived and moved, and had our being"
+in railway carriages; a mode of life rendered so comfortable by all
+appliances, that it was sometimes no relief to be told that we would
+have to pass the night at an hotel.
+
+For nine days and nine nights in succession, on one occasion, we never
+slept out of the carriages or got out of the train except to take a
+stroll about the station, or a peep into the street of a small town
+whilst we were waiting, and one got quite accustomed to that nomad and
+yet civilised mode of existence, where at every halting-place we were
+supplied with the latest intelligence by the local papers, and made
+the recipients of some attention or courtesy, visits and compliments
+(the remarks of the other sort not being many), bouquets of flowers,
+presents of fruit, and plenty of conversation. But that my critics
+might say I dilate too much upon the material enjoyment of life, I
+would describe at length the means which were supplied in the course
+of these long journeys for animal enjoyment. Never could there be found
+more attentive and obliging domestics than the coloured men who waited
+upon us--Arthur and his fellows. There lived in the kitchen compartment
+of the train, at the end of one of the saloons, a coloured cook,
+very intelligent and gossipy, full of quaint conceits and dishes and
+conversation, who commenced life as a slave on a Southern plantation,
+probably adopted for indoor purposes on account of his smartness. He
+liberated himself in the course of the war, and marched off with a
+regiment of Federals in the capacity of cook and body-servant to one
+of the officers, wherein he saw a great amount of very hard fighting
+at very close quarters. This adventurous modern Othello was wont to
+discourse with much animation when he came out for a breath of fresh
+air on the platform and could find anybody to talk to him, although
+he could move no more tender heart than that of Sir Henry Green. The
+gentlemen of the Atchison, &c., Railway, when travelling with us, had
+a _cordon bleu_ in the saloon--an Italian or Frenchman, I think, or
+at all events a French-speaking man, who had served also, and would
+have done credit to an establishment where faults in a _chef_ would
+not lightly be condoned. In the interchange of courtesies, Mr. White
+and his friends invited our party now and then to dine in the saloon,
+which was not "across the way," but up a little, on the line, being the
+saloon in front of us.
+
+But here we are at Kansas City once again! At 5.30 P.M. the train
+arrived at the platform, which was gay with a Sunday crowd, of
+whom many were negresses--black, brown, brindled, and yellow
+_citoyennes_--in much variety of colour and garmenting. Unlike Samson,
+their weakness is in their hair, and like Achilles, they are vulnerable
+about the heels (to the arrows of an æsthetical criticism, which
+accepts the Greek idea of beauty in form); but they seemed to enjoy
+life amazingly, and not to be in need of beaux; perhaps the happiest
+people in the world now that their chattel days are over. It was late
+when we turned into our berths, for it was a lovely night and the
+fire-flies exercised a great attraction over us, but at last the charm
+was worn out and we slept till morning without a break.
+
+_June 20th._--Still the same boundless plain. In vain does one look for
+the grass fields with close, even, carpet-like surface to be seen in
+Europe. We are still passing through exceedingly rich land--the fields
+covered with flocks of sheep and herds of good-looking cattle. There
+are more trees by the stream-side, and shrubs growing in the hollows.
+Habitations are more frequent, and so are fencing and planting. As the
+sun was setting we approached St. Louis. There were some park-like
+glades, and vistas opening up to pleasant mansions, amid grounds
+showing marks of culture. There had been a severe thunderstorm the
+night before, and the St. Louis Station had still traces of its effects
+in pools of mud. But the rain had cooled the air, and the people were
+rejoicing exceedingly in the great improvement that had taken place
+in the weather, for, they told us, men and women had been dropping
+down with the heat a few days ago as though they had been struck by
+musketry.
+
+The appearance of the St. Louis Terminus gave one a high idea of the
+importance of this city. Eight trains were waiting on their respective
+lines to start with passengers to all parts of the Union; and by
+the simple device of placing at the end of each train a large board
+announcing its destination and the time of its departure, much anxiety
+was saved to intending passengers, not to speak of the irritation of
+officials avoided by this simple expedient. The journey was continued
+by the Indianopolis and Vandalia, and by what is called the "Pa'handle"
+line to the Pennsylvania Railroad on to Philadelphia. The train was
+timed on Tuesday so that we were able to see the famous passage over
+the Alleghany Mountains from Conemaugh to Altoona. For nearly eleven
+miles we were carried without steam, and with the brakes on, through
+very fine scenery, down the mountain-side, but the summit was crossed
+in the darkness of a tunnel 1200 yards long. There are some striking
+engineering feats in the way of curves and gradients, and the trace
+of the line is very bold all the way down to Altoona, where the
+Pennsylvania Railroad engine and machinery shops are established--the
+centre of a population of some 17,000 souls, where twenty years ago
+"there were," as a friend said, "only bears, deer, woodpeckers, and
+skallywags." The Duke, Mr. Stephen, and our railway experts got out
+and visited the workshops, and came back very much pleased at the
+discovery of several London and North-Western men in good positions
+in the Pennsylvania Railroad Company's service, who welcomed their
+old directors with effusion, and that there was nothing visible there
+for Crewe to copy, unless perhaps cast-iron wheels. The speed at
+which we travelled was a sensible proof that we were once more on the
+line of our old friends of Pennsylvania. From Altoona to Harrisburg,
+132 miles, we rattled along in two hours and forty-three minutes. On
+another stretch of the line we travelled eighty-three miles in one
+hour and forty-two seconds, including stoppages; and the rapid motion
+was very agreeable, as there was a perceptible increase of temperature
+after we reached the plains and approached the beautiful valley of the
+Susquehannah--a scene of industry, prosperity, and peace. Fortunately
+there was a good light on the river, and we had a fine view of the
+country all the way to Harrisburg under the rays of the setting sun.
+A little farther on we were gratified by the appearance of General
+Roberts at a station on the way, where he was awaiting the Duke to
+congratulate him on his safe return from the Western expedition, and we
+bade him farewell at his own house, with many sincere and well-deserved
+acknowledgments of great and constant kindness. Then over the river by
+the noble bridge, and on to Philadelphia. We did not visit Pittsburg,
+which was vomiting out masses of smoke, nor did we halt this time at
+the capital of the Quaker State.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport--Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our last day in America.
+
+
+The special train was detained by the immense amount of traffic on the
+line, as we approached New York, and we did not reach Brooklyn till a
+little before 11 P.M. on June 21, so that it was past midnight when we
+ascended the steps of the Windsor Hotel, which we had selected by way
+of a change, and found to be every way commendable, with the exception
+of its distance from the busy parts of the city. The following day
+was devoted to letter reading and writing, receiving visitors, and
+various attempts "to go out," which were not generally successful, for
+New York was palpitating with the intense heat. The "heated term" was
+in full vigour, but it was now quite temperate in comparison to the
+excesses which had marked its advent some time before our arrival. In
+the evening we got up strength and courage enough to go to Wallack's
+Theatre, a very pretty, well-constructed house, and saw "The World"
+excellently acted and admirably put on the stage. Next day, June
+23rd, in virtue of a solemn league and covenant with Uncle Sam and
+Mr. Hurlbut, the Duke and I devoted ourselves to fresh fields and
+pastures new, and ordered ourselves accordingly for Coney Island. A
+long bank of sand by the sea-shore has, by an accident, become one of
+the most crowded resorts in the world, and to-day there were races in
+the new ground. It was not, as we found, so easy to get there. Having
+the advantage of two experienced guides, our party of four managed to
+break up into two and to miss each other; one taking the boat at one
+iron pier, and the other embarking by a different mode of conveyance.
+But as we were bound to see Coney Island, the Race course being a
+secondary object, our temporary separation did not prove a source of
+great annoyance.
+
+The early settlers would indeed have been astonished if they could
+look round and see what they have brought the quiet place to in these
+later days. They were Quakers persecuted by the good Christians of New
+England, who were driven out of Boston as ruthlessly as though they
+had been malignants and papists of the worst sort. They settled the
+township of Gravesend about 250 years ago, and amongst the conspicuous
+settlers occurs the title and name of Lady Deborah Moody, of whom this
+deponent knows nothing, but wonders how, with such a title, she managed
+to have influence amongst a Society of Friends.
+
+A ship was built, so the Americans say, of 70 tons in 1699, by the
+descendants of the Quaker settlers, and less than 100 years later
+the bold republicans, abandoning the doctrines of peace, engaged
+and captured an English corvette off the island. It was all along of
+General How, who landed his troops here and set the people to work on
+the fortifications he threw up, whether they would or no. A corvette,
+bound to Halifax, anchored off the island, and an old whaler, who,
+says the chronicler, must have been smarting under the wrongs he had
+suffered at the hands of the red-coats, or who possibly regarded the
+work as he would the capture of a finner or a bottle-nose, imparted
+to a few trusty friends the idea of "cutting her out." So embarking at
+night in a couple of boats, they stole down with muffled oars and ran
+up under the stern of the ship. There was no watch, and through the
+cabin windows the officers could be seen playing cards. The crews of
+the boats boarded the corvette simultaneously, seized, overpowered, and
+bound the officers and men, lowered them into their boats, and, having
+set the man-of-war on fire, pulled over to the Jersey shore with their
+prisoners. It is to be hoped that the demeanour and language of the
+captain have been misrepresented by local tradition; but he is said
+to have cried bitterly, and to have exclaimed, "To be surprised and
+captured by two blooming egg-shells is too blasted bad!"
+
+There was a long period of neglect before Fashion and the populace
+found out the attractions of Coney Island. Fishermen, oyster-catchers,
+and sportsmen visited the sandy beach from time to time; then after
+a while a few houses were run up of a very inferior class, and these
+were frequented by the very worst of the scum of New York, so that it
+was almost dangerous, and certainly disgusting, to go among them, while
+the scenes on the beach, to which the present proceedings afford such
+a contrast, were described as being of the most disgraceful character.
+
+The official directions for spending a day at Coney Island certainly
+indicate a belief in the possession of enormous physical energy and
+indefatigable curiosity on the part of the visitors in those who
+compose the code. Having given you sailing instructions by the iron
+steam boat to Bay Ridge for the Sea Beach Railway (ticket 35 cents),
+you are to visit the Sea View Palace Hotel, the Piazza, the two iron
+piers, the _Camera obscura_ (10 cents), the Great Milking Cow, the
+top of the observatory (15 cents); then to eat a Rhode Island clam
+bake (50 cents), visit the aquarium (10 cents), take a park waggon and
+ride over the Concourse to Brighton; see the hotel grounds and bathing
+pavilion there; then take the Marine Railway (5 cents) to Manhattan
+Beach; visit the Oriental Hotel and take the Marine Railway to Point
+Breeze (10 cents) and return back to Brighton Beach Pavilion and take
+a bath; then see the Museum of Living Wonders (10 cents), dine at the
+Hotel Brighton, hear a concert in the evening, and return to New York
+by 11 o'clock. "This trip," observes the compiler, "may fatigue one,
+but the excitement soon overcomes the trouble." Coney Island is indeed
+an institution.
+
+Along the sea front of the bank for some three or four miles there
+has been constructed an esplanade lined with seats, and defended from
+the sea by a stone wall. Outside there is a belt of shingle on which
+the surf breaks, but not violently, unless in bad weather. Large
+bathing establishments, with every appliance, are placed at convenient
+intervals along the shore. Here in the season tens of thousands of
+people may be seen, all properly and decently attired, disporting in
+the waves. At the time of our visit, the hour and the season of the
+year seemed not to be favourable to the indulgence. We were too late
+in the day. It is an early place, and from 7 till 9 A.M. from the
+month of June to the end of September are described as the orthodox
+periods. Nevertheless the spectacle was quite unique, and if you can
+imagine Brighton with half-a-dozen Pavilions blown out to twice their
+size, and the largest hotels multiplied by ten in length, breadth, and
+depth, you may fancy what the Coney Island front is, provided always
+that you can also conjure up (literally) myriads of well-dressed men,
+women, and children perambulating the esplanade or sitting in the
+grounds around the various establishments which occupy a large space
+inland--pavilions, hotels, exhibitions, restaurants, and club-houses.
+There were fireworks going on in broad day; but these were principally
+for the purpose of exhibiting very ingenious Japanese figures, which
+were discharged from bombs, and which gradually descending were objects
+of eager competition amongst the younger members of the enormous
+multitude. And with all so much good-humour, so much propriety of
+demeanour; none of the brutal rushes of "roughs" which disgust one
+with English popular assemblages--none of the brutal horse-play, and
+screams, and unmeaning cries of the 'Arrys and the Bills of our popular
+resorts.
+
+Looking at Mr. Marshall's excellent book on the United States, which
+we found to be copious and accurate, I was struck by what he says
+respecting a habit of the people which, according to my experience,
+has very much decreased since I was last in the States, but which
+he finds in as full force, and repulsive as ever. I am bound to say
+I think the habit of spitting has very much diminished, but from
+numerous evidences, from the presence of spittoons in every room and
+in the passages of the hotels, and from public admonitions, such as
+one we saw at some of the theatres, that the audience would not spit
+upon the stage, I must believe that it still exists. What the cause
+of this habit may be it is not easy to determine. It cannot be in the
+race, because it is scarcely an "English" habit. I would be inclined
+to attribute it to the drinking of iced water, but ladies in America
+use the national beverage quite as freely as the men, and spitting is a
+masculine failing. Can it be a result of climate? Scarcely. For in the
+States, British-born people do not seem to be affected by the influence
+of the habit in those around them after many years' residence. Smokers
+and non-smokers alike indulge in the practice, so that tobacco cannot
+be charged with the disagreeable custom. I assume that it is as common
+as Mr. Marshall asserts it is, but I am bound to say, according to
+my own observation and experience on my last visit, that there was no
+evidence to show that it was common or national. Chewing tobacco also
+appears to me to have fewer votaries than formerly. A remark to that
+effect at Richmond brought upon me something like a rebuke from the
+gentleman to whom I spoke, a Judge of the land. "No, sir," he said,
+"not at all! I rather think we chew more than ever!" And, to illustrate
+his faith, he produced a silver box, shaped a plug of no doubt very
+excellent weed, and thrust it into his mouth. I do not recollect,
+however, meeting a gentleman in the course of our journey who used
+tobacco in that way, with that exception.
+
+In the grounds in front of the pavilion, where an excellent orchestra
+of some one hundred performers were playing, sat a very large and
+appreciative audience, who applauded with discrimination, and were
+content with the good performance of each piece.
+
+Our common rendezvous was the Surf Club, one of the numerous convivial
+associations for which Coney Island seems to be specially adapted;
+and I presume the name had nothing at all to do with any supposed
+amusements of the members in connection with the surf on the beach
+outside. There was some difficulty in finding our way through a
+labyrinth of rooms all filled with guests: with corridors swarming
+with people; with vast halls, where at hundreds of tables there were
+seated people engaged in the consumption of the _menu_ of a Coney
+Island restaurant, abounding in strange dishes and attended by armies
+of waiters. At a rough guess, I should say there may have been about
+4000 people in the building--and this was but one of several--I think
+the Brighton Beach Hotel, but of this I am not quite sure.
+
+When the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad was opened none
+believed in its success, but the foresight of the projector was
+justified; and when it was found that respectable people would go
+there, if the vagabonds of both sexes and their associates were driven
+away, the police asserted themselves, and swept off the gamblers and
+the others of a still more dangerous class, who were to be found there
+in increasing numbers every year; and then hotels were erected and
+landing-places made for the steamers; and now the electric light blazes
+in a hundred halls, and music and rejoicing sound late into the night,
+contending with the noise of the surf upon the beach. Bowling-alleys,
+shooting-grounds, archery, croquet, sailing and rowing, all invite some
+of the visitors, according to their tastes. An amusing exemplification
+of the ingenuity of American advertisers is afforded by the sailing
+vessels, which display in enormous characters on their main-sails
+the names of quack medicines, from which no corner of this continent
+appears to be safe.
+
+On June 24th the party, which had been somewhat dislocated, reunited
+their scattered forces, and at 2 P.M. started by train after a little
+repose, for Newport, R.I. It was a kind of holiday after our travels,
+but somewhat out of place, for we were told the Ocean House was
+scarcely ready; but we should not have found it out, had we not been
+informed of the fact. The newspapers had been on the alert, and soon
+after the Duke's arrival visitors began to call and invitations to pour
+in--some well-nigh irresistible, for they included opportunities for
+experiences of bass-fishing.
+
+_June 25th._--Newport has not yet put on its festive attire. It is
+not the season, and we ought not to be here. Nevertheless it is still
+so pleasant, and so respectably dull, that one enjoys it amazingly.
+After breakfast we walked down to the seashore and sat gazing on
+vacancy, and on three yellow ladies collecting clams. Returning thence
+in a very hot sun, ran to earth in the hotel where, presently, there
+were many visitors; and how kind and anxious to please they were! Mr.
+Fearing drove up later on the top of a drag, and whirled us away to
+a charming fishing-box on the shore, in order to judge for ourselves
+what bass-fishing was like. It was a very pretty drive, and Mr. Fearing
+handled his "four" as if he were bent on joining the Coaching Club--not
+indiscreetly, as the horses were not accustomed to going together, but
+with satisfactory decision--and we all were landed without mishap by
+the side of the road, close to one of the best-organised sporting-boxes
+I have ever seen, built entirely for the comfort and delectation of
+Mr. Fearing and two or three friends who own the bass-fishing stands,
+at the end of one of which a gentleman was then busily engaged in his
+pastime, for the sea comes rolling up upon the rocks within some forty
+or fifty yards of the sward of the green meadows on which the house
+is placed. From it projects into the breakers a platform supported
+on iron pillars, at the end of which there is an enlargement of the
+structure to enable the fisherman and his attendants to stand at their
+ease--the one in hurling the bait and the other in preparing it. And
+first, as a proof that the labour is not futile, there was exhibited a
+terrible-headed monster with great scales, which had been caught that
+morning by Mr. Whipple--a bass of 57 lbs. weight, of which I think the
+skull and jaws and gills must have weighed a third. The fishing is not,
+as I found, to be done at once, but needs a little practice. The art of
+casting consists in the double operation of jerking the bait from the
+top of a stiff rod, and checking the run of the line without permitting
+it to overrun, which it is very apt to do in an inexperienced hand, by
+a pressure of the thumb on the reel, just sufficient to let the weight
+of the bait carry out the hook to the farthest stretch of the jerk.
+The rod, not more than eight or nine feet long, a work of great art,
+and costly, is furnished with a reel, also very expensive, containing a
+couple of hundred yards of prepared line. At the end is a large single
+hook, sometimes secured to a piece of piano-wire, as the "blue fish"
+will cut through the strongest cord or gut. To this is fixed a junk of
+fat oily fish, of which supplies are kept in a basket close at hand,
+to be cut up for ever and ever by the attendant, and ever and anon
+pieces are chucked into the sea, and being of a very unctuous nature,
+the oil rising to the top, floats away on the surface of the water, and
+attracts the bass within measurable distance of the platform. Captain
+Fearing threw, Mr. Whipple threw, and the gentlemen at the end of
+another pier emulated them, and pounds, perhaps stones, of bait were
+thrown into the sea, but the bass, which are capricious, like most
+fish, were not to be caught; and so after a time we returned to the
+cottage.
+
+I was, unfortunately, unable to accept an invitation from one of the
+many hospitable gentlemen in Newport, to go out and spend the evening
+on a desolate island, where they are said generally to have exceedingly
+good sport, in order to get up before sunrise the following morning
+and essay my skill, or want of it, in bass-fishing. Mr. Wright, an
+enthusiastic sportsman, availed himself of a like invitation with
+great pleasure and with many anticipations of delight, but on Monday
+morning he returned weather-beaten back, and boot-less and bass-less
+home, although he assured me he enjoyed himself very much, and had very
+agreeable company out at sea on the rock.
+
+The following day (June 26th) was cloudy and cool, and all that was
+of rank and fashion in Newport went to All Souls Church. There are
+many churches in Newport, and in the height of the season, each is,
+I am told, well filled on Sundays. And wonderful it is that there is
+neither dissension nor controversy among the congregations. They mingle
+together coming and going, affording to me, who have been accustomed at
+times to observe the manners and customs of my country men and women
+on like occasions in Ireland and elsewhere, ground for wonder, not
+unintermingled with an ardent desire that we, nearer home, could learn
+the secret of this moderation.
+
+Mr. Bridgman, our fellow-passenger in the "_Gallia_," is enjoying his
+_villeggiatura_ with his wife and family in a pretty little cottage.
+We were very much pleased indeed to renew our acquaintance with him,
+although there was no scope for the display of his fine talents as a
+salad-maker. It was not foggy enough for the ladies, who delight in a
+thick and moist _brume_ from the Banks, and who sit at the open windows
+when it comes on for the sake of their complexions, as it is esteemed
+a sovereign cosmetic beyond Maydew or Kalydor. Whether it be rightly
+credited with these virtues or not, I can answer for the presence of
+many fair ladies in church, and on their way to and fro in the streets.
+We dined with Mr. and Mrs. Keene, who reside in one of the best villas
+of the many charming dwellings in Newport.
+
+The victories of the American horses in France and England created
+an enthusiasm in the States almost as intense as though they had been
+won by the national fleets or armies. From one end of the Union to the
+other the news was flashed the same day, and we saw the names of the
+conquerors in large letters in every newspaper. Unfortunately there
+came at the same time reports of foul play to American competitors at
+the hands of some English roughs, and there was a good deal of heat
+caused by the objections taken to the entry of the "Cornell Crew" at
+Henley. These international contests should be very carefully conducted
+and judiciously worked, or they will do more harm than good, if indeed
+they do any good at all. The injurious insinuations respecting the age
+of Foxhall could but excite indignation in the minds of honourable men
+against whom they were directed.
+
+There is a State House in the town, and there is also a mansion
+occupied by Commodore Perry, but the most useful inhabitant of the
+place appears to have been one Abraham Touro, a Jew, who gave his name
+to the park, a cemetery, a synagogue, and a street. Altogether there
+is rather an old-world air and look in the town; but one must go along
+the Avenues to have an idea of the charms which lead so many of the
+principal families of the Eastern States to make the place a resort
+when they are not enjoying the delights of travel in Europe, or that
+blissful existence which endears Paris to our Transatlantic relatives.
+Bellevue Avenue is bordered by a number of very sprightly dwellings,
+of every order and disorder of architecture, and rejoicing in all the
+extraordinary richness and elaboration of American workmanship in wood,
+each standing in a little park of its own, generally rich with trees,
+shrubs, and an ornamental garden. Several of these interiors, as we
+had reason to know, were furnished in the very best taste, and filled
+with objects of art, excellent examples of good masters, principally
+foreign, and articles imported from all the corners of the globe. Of
+an afternoon the ladies might be seen driving, in very well turned-out
+carriages, to some rendezvous where lawn-tennis or a picnic awaited
+them; and altogether, even at this time of year, Newport presented a
+picture of great refinement and comfort, which enable the visitor to
+understand how attractive it must be in the height of the season, and
+why it is Americans are so fond of life in Rhode Island.
+
+I am not in a position to throw the smallest doubt upon the statement
+that the mass of stones in the form of a tower, ivy and moss covered,
+and evidently the work of human hands, was not built by the hardy
+Norsemen hundreds of years before the arrival of Columbus. There are,
+moreover, people who declare that the erection is due to a British
+governor of the colony, when it was more prosperous as a commercial
+resort, though not so fashionable as it is at present. But American
+antiquaries take a great pleasure in propping up the proofs which have
+been adduced of Scandinavian enterprise and discovery on the continent,
+many centuries before Vespuccius, Columbus, and the English navigators
+lived.
+
+We dined on the evening of the 27th at the house of Mr. Shattock,
+a gentleman of New York, who had assembled a party of very pleasant
+people to meet the Duke, and kindly hastened his dinner-hour to suit
+our convenience, as we were obliged to go on board the Fall River boat,
+which called at 9.30 P.M. to take up passengers for the Empire City.
+There was some difficulty about getting cabins or state rooms as they
+are called, but "Uncle Sam," who came from New York to consort with us
+quietly, applied himself diligently to telegraph wires, telephones,
+and the like, and when the great steamer came alongside the wharf
+our dormitories were ready. The night was calm and fine. There was an
+excellent band, quite worthy of being called an orchestra, on board,
+which played to the delight of a large audience till it was bed-time.
+As a "sight" for a foreigner, nothing could be more striking than
+the vast saloon, brilliantly illuminated, with hundreds of people on
+sofas, chairs, and benches, reading or conversing in the intervals
+of the music, and presenting infinite varieties of type and class,
+yet all so orderly and well-behaved; and if you moved quietly through
+the crowd, your ear caught many strange languages interpolating the
+American speech--German, French, Polish, Russian, Italian, and, perhaps
+the natives would say, British. There is some care observed in the
+locking up of cabins, and I believe there are detectives and police on
+board the boats; but it is said they do not look after the morals of
+the passengers, and concern themselves only with vested interests in
+portable property. There was no sea on, and the only motion was caused
+by the beating of the paddles and the throbbing of the engine, and
+early in the morning of the next day we were at our quarters in our
+comfortable hotel in the Fifth Avenue.
+
+_June 29th._--And yet more excursions. Bound by a long-standing
+engagement, a small detachment of our party set out this evening to
+visit Mr. Barlow at his country place, Long Island, which travellers,
+perhaps, have not much occasion to see. The Mayor of New York (Mr.
+Grace) and Mr. O'Gorman were on the steamer which took the Duke, Mr. S.
+Ward, Mr. Hurlbut, and our host down the Sound, and were introduced to
+us by Mr. Barlow. The first-named gentleman I mentioned in one of the
+early pages of this diary in connection with the vigorous efforts to
+purify the civic atmosphere made by him on his accession to office. I
+learn that he has since obtained a large measure of success, and let me
+hope corresponding thanks from his fellow-citizens. Attacks on corrupt
+influences are apt to receive lukewarm support from the politicians.
+The power of the respectable classes, which hold aloof from politics,
+is not large. Mr. Grace had more opposition than help from his own
+countrymen, who have been long nearly omnipotent in New York, and who
+monopolise a large proportion of the civic offices and employment.
+Mr. O'Gorman, one of the traversers with O'Connell in the famous State
+trials, is one of the leading lawyers of New York, and is held in much
+respect by his fellow-citizens. The "old Country" is still dear to him,
+but I seemed to gather from his remarks that he shared in the distrust
+which American lawyers generally expressed respecting the principle of
+the Land Bill then under discussion as far as interference with the law
+of contract--"the very foundation of social life"--was involved. Glen
+Cove is a beautiful place, standing high above the level of the sea,
+and commanding charming views of the sound and of the opposite shore.
+It is surrounded by trees, ornamented by woodland and fine natural
+groves, broken up by ravines, through which trickle streams of water.
+The mansion is furnished with every comfort and luxury, and we had a
+garden to saunter about in the morning, and a genial hostess to talk
+to, and her fair daughter to sing for us, so that it would have pleased
+us well to have made a longer sojourn at Glen Cove. Here we passed two
+very peaceful days, part of Wednesday and Thursday, and in a pleasant
+drive with our host in the early morning had some slight outlook on
+umbrageous Long Island. "_O! si angulus iste!_" It is 115 miles long
+and 14 miles broad, and quite big enough for me! And there be deer
+in the woods and trout in the rivers, and fish in all the creeks,
+and game in the wooded lagoons, and forest, lake, and civilised life,
+and many things to please the eye; and then the comet was so good as
+to display his glories and his tail before Glen Cove. But our time
+of departure from the States was drawing near, and there were still
+things to be done in New York, and many engagements to be kept, ere we
+started on our homeward journey on July 2nd; and at 12.35 on the 30th
+June the Duke and I took the "cars" at a rural station, and reached
+New York at 2.35, in time for a run through Tiffany's and some little
+shopping and visiting. There was a dinner arranged by "Uncle Sam" at
+"Sutherland's" in honour of the famous city restaurant. The house is
+one of a type which has, I believe, disappeared in the "City," where
+once flourished famous establishments such as Williams' Beef Shop
+in the Old Bailey, Dolly's in Paternoster Row, the Billingsgate Fish
+Ordinary, Jacquet's, &c., like it in character. Great New Yorkers do
+not disdain to cross the threshold, within which they find admirable
+fare and excellent wines--the national delights of clam chowder, clam
+soup, soft-shell crabs, and many other Transatlantic delicacies--at
+the far end of Broadway, still holding its own against the fashionable
+restaurants. Of the party who dined there with Chancellor Robertson
+and others in 1861, only "Uncle Sam," Mr. S. Barlow, and I survive; but
+the host, a granitic sort of man, with a kindly Scottish heart warming
+the case inside, seems capable of presiding over his feasts for another
+generation.
+
+_July 1st._--It was difficult to realise the idea that this was our
+last day in America, but the truth was forced on us by the practical
+duties of getting the baggage ready and settling up generally, ending
+with a dinner at the Turf Club, where we met Mr. Keene, of Foxhall
+fame, who had also entertained us at Newport, Mr. Jerome, Mr. Stuart,
+Mr. Travers, and other fathers of the New York sporting world, which
+seems very like our own, and had to drink madeira of all but fabulous
+antiquity and excellence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home.
+
+
+_July 2nd._[B]--Up at 5.30. The Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry, Mr.
+Wright, Edward, all engaged in the transport department, with Mr.
+Trowbridge in observation; incessant activity. The Queen Anne coach
+was in readiness at 7.30, and in half an hour more we were discharged
+at the Inman wharf. There was a great flotilla--five large steamers
+leaving at the same period for Liverpool, and there was the usual
+throng at the landing-places of friends to bid "good-bye" to those who
+were about to cross the Atlantic. The steamer we had selected belonged
+to the Inman line, and whatever there may have been wanting to the eye
+on board, compared to the trimness and paint of the Cunard steamers,
+there was nothing to regret in our accommodation or service. There were
+so many passengers that the dining-saloon, illuminated by the electric
+light--which was also used for the purpose of lighting the engine-room
+and the lamps in the corridors--would not contain them all at the same
+time, and so there were two messes for dinner. Epergnes filled with the
+most beautiful flowers were ranged in order, and a rampant war-steed
+composed of white roses was displayed on the table. I am not about to
+give a log-book, or to trespass on the patience of my readers by an
+account of such an ordinary event as a passage home. The second day
+after we left New York was the anniversary of Independence, July 4th,
+and the day was duly celebrated by the citizens of the United States,
+who constituted the large majority of our fellow-passengers. The "stars
+and stripes" were hoisted at the main, and the cabin was draped with
+British and American flags. But there was no speechifying, and the
+spread-eagle was content with moderate flights; a recitation and a song
+or two, and the fire of champagne corks, being the only indications of
+an extraordinary festivity.
+
+About this time of the year the Atlantic, in the latitudes which
+we traverse, is rather vexed of fogs; and if one be disposed to low
+spirits, I know nothing which weighs upon him more than the sound of
+the fog-horn. But what must it be for the captain, who is perforce
+obliged to go at full speed, or as near to it as he can, with the
+expectation every moment of some startled cry from the bow "Sail right
+ahead!" Nor is it quite out of the running that an iceberg may be
+taking a sail across his course. Fortunately we had no experiences of
+the kind; and as night was falling on the 10th July land was in sight.
+
+The lights of the Fastnet were seen through drifting haze, and about 10
+o'clock at night the "_City of Berlin_" steamed through a rising sea,
+with a strong beam wind, into the roadstead of Roche's Point, burned
+her rockets, and laid-to for the steamer to take the mails, and those
+passengers who had decided to land, on shore.
+
+It was blowing freshly, and rain fell heavily; and as we looked down
+from the lighted decks on the murky water, and made out the tug as
+she paddled up to us, rising and falling on the waves, we were seized
+with reasonable misgivings as to the propriety of leaving our ship and
+taking to such a craft. I am bound to say that our experience more than
+amply justified them.
+
+I am writing these lines with a very faint hope that any amendment
+will be introduced, in consequence of what I say, into the abominable
+service between the American vessels off Roche's Point and Queenstown.
+In fine weather and in daylight it is not of much consequence, perhaps,
+what discomfort one may be exposed to in a short passage to the
+shore; but to affront women and children with the misery which must be
+experienced at night time and in bad weather, in the steamers employed
+in the service, is little short of barbarous, if it be not indeed
+altogether so.
+
+After I had got down upon the deck of the little steamer and surveyed
+the scene around me, I thought that it would have been much wiser to
+have gone on with my friends to Liverpool; but I had some engagements
+in Ireland, and so had the experience I was glad not to share with
+my fellow-passengers, on whom I should have liked the old country
+to have made a favourable impression. There was the great steamer,
+with hundreds of waving hands, and the sound of friendly voices
+bidding us "God speed," a blaze of lights, and almost as steady as
+the solid earth, as the horrible little tug puffed away, and, getting
+from under her lee at once, encountered the swell. If she could have
+ridden over the water below, she certainly could not escape that which
+came down from above; so that we were all pretty wet and cross and
+miserable in the half-hour which elapsed before we reached the shore.
+Fortunately, there were not many passengers who availed themselves
+of the opportunity; but the deck of the steamer was crowded by poor
+people returning to their native country. Accommodation for the
+cabin passengers, except seats on the wet and sloppy decks, there was
+none. There was a little cabin, stuffy and comfortless, and moreover
+occupied by a couple of women who had come out to see friends by way
+of a pleasure excursion, and who were suffering the last extremities
+of sea-sickness. The spray broke over the luggage and passengers;
+it was in such circumstances that the custom-house officers began
+their search. One of them, opening my bag, which was unlocked, found
+a small revolver. It was unloaded, and there was no ammunition for
+it; but, nevertheless, it was seized, for I was "importing arms into
+a proclaimed district without licence." A similar mishap occurred to
+a Spanish officer, who was not quite so easily appeased as I was by
+the assurance that the arm would be given up on proper application
+to the police. His revolver, he insisted, was part of his uniform, a
+necessity of his existence, and the authorities might as well seize
+his epaulettes or spurs. However, my deadly weapon was restored to me
+some days afterwards, after a correspondence with the custom-house,
+and I dare say the Hidalgo was equally fortunate. These were incidents
+to denote that we were in the midst of trouble. There was but a sorry
+welcome for us when we landed at Queenstown. Not a car to be found,
+that I could see; but there were a few porters, and the agent of the
+hotel at the pier; and, commending my luggage to his care, I walked to
+the establishment. It surely cannot be quite an unaccustomed event for
+a steamer to arrive at Queenstown at that time of night! The last train
+for Cork had gone; and it might have been expected that lighted rooms
+and some sort of preparation would have awaited the travellers; for
+every vessel that touches at Queenstown, coming from America, surely
+lands a few people needing rest and refreshment? A demoralised waiter,
+who appeared to think that such a thing had never happened in the
+whole course of his experience, as the inroad of ten or twelve people
+asking for supper and bedrooms, informed us that nothing could be done
+until the gentleman who represented the hotel at the landing-place had
+arrived; and so we sat on the stairs for half an hour, and were then
+shown into a gaunt room, dimly lighted by gas. There was nothing ready.
+The hungry people, by dint of patience and perseverance, eventually
+succeeded about midnight in obtaining some poor substitute for supper
+and scrambled to their beds.
+
+I mention the circumstances in which my fellow-passengers and I were
+landed at Queenstown, that those who are interested in promoting
+the welfare of the port, and in making the route through Ireland
+less thoroughly objectionable, may take steps to obviate the great
+inconvenience to which travellers at present are certainly exposed.
+
+Next morning I reached Mallow. I was but a few hours in the
+"distressful country," but I found that things had gone from bad to
+worse while we were in the States. I heard from my fellow-travellers
+in the train that "Boycotting" had attained such a pitch in the South,
+that all the relations and conditions of social life were exposed
+to peril, if not destruction. And still, with the usual cheerfulness
+of Irish landlords, accustomed, as it were, to these excesses of the
+popular will, my informants talked of hunting, fishing, and shooting;
+and I heard full accounts of the state of the rivers, and of the take
+of fish which had made some of them happy. The County Cork, indeed,
+had nearly a parallel in the "wild West." But what a contrast between
+the state of public feeling, in respect to the outrages which were
+perpetrated in each, in the country we had left, and that to which
+I had returned! In the United States there was no attempt to justify
+the men who were guilty of such deeds. In Ireland it was impossible to
+obtain evidence or to convict the offenders. I am not going to close
+this narrative of our little excursion with a political disquisition,
+indeed I have not the materials for forming any opinion respecting the
+breadth and depth of what may be called the Irish national movement in
+the United States; but there seems to be a general vague impression
+in America that as the British Government was not very wise and
+equitable in its dealings with the people of the thirteen colonies
+in the reign of King George, it is, somehow or other, at the present
+moment, treating with harshness and injustice the whole of the Irish
+race in Ireland. It is impossible not to recognise the fact that the
+head, perhaps the heart, and certainly the purse of this development of
+Irish discontent are in the United States. The arms, the body, and the
+legs are in Ireland. During the whole time of our visit, although we
+visited towns where eminent orators were lecturing upon Irish subjects,
+and where representatives of the League were in session, there was not
+a trace brought home to us of the strong sympathy which undoubtedly
+exists in many American cities with the movement in Ireland. There
+were accounts of the meetings in the newspapers, and now and then a few
+leading articles on the subject; but we might have concluded, from what
+we saw and heard generally, that the Irish question was of far less
+importance to the American people than the religious views of Colonel
+Ingersoll, or the discussions between the railway companies respecting
+their fares. The recital of wrongs, most of which have been long ago
+redressed, still reaches the ear and touches the heart of the American
+public, and if the Irish population had not in many ways provoked or
+excited the antagonism of the native Americans in the towns, and of
+the Teutonic element which exercises such a powerful influence in
+the country, there would be far greater sympathy for the supposed
+oppression of the Sister Island by England. The fact that emigrants
+come from Europe is accepted as a proof that the countries which they
+leave are ill-governed; and Americans, in dealing with the emigration
+question, are apt to forget the existence and nature of the forces
+which induced their own ancestors to seek homes in the New World.
+
+The _New York Times_ declared in an article last June, that there is no
+essential difference between the two divisions of the Irish in America
+and of the Irish in Ireland. The voyage across the Atlantic works no
+transformation in Pat, and he is still as much an Irishman after his
+plunge into an alien civilisation and taking out his papers as when
+he stood on the old sod in Meath or Tipperary. "He cares no more for
+the American eagle than for an owl; but a sprig of shamrock stirs him
+to ecstasy. The name of Washington has no meaning for his ear; but
+that of St. Patrick is a living and potent reality." That statement,
+however, must be taken with qualification. There are to-day 90,000
+acres of land in Minnesota as thoroughly Irish as if they were planted
+in the centre of Connaught. There are Pats and Pats. Many of the most
+wealthy and prosperous merchants, bankers, and landowners whom we met
+in the West were not merely of Irish extraction, but born Irishmen,
+and the extraordinary spectacle of Irish millionaires who knew how to
+keep their money, and to add to it, too, may be seen in San Francisco
+and elsewhere in the West. Many, less fortunate, have high positions
+either in the army, or as politicians, or in the estimation of all
+that is great and good in America--such as Mr. O'Conor--men who have
+held aloof from politics, and who could not be tempted, even by the
+Presidentship, to enter the arena of party strife. One convicted rebel
+of 1840 now occupies a leading place at the American bar. I heard him
+denounce the Land Bill in terms he might have used in denouncing the
+atrocities of the Saxon in his hot days when O'Connell was king. The
+influence which has been acquired in many parts of the Union by the
+Irish immigration and by the descendants of immigrants has naturally
+excited at various times the opposition and indignation of the American
+born, and it has always been more or less opposed by the Teutons of
+different nationalities who occupy such a powerful position in all
+the great States of the West. But "the Native Party" is now either
+dead or sleeping. A very distinguished officer and politician said
+to me that he had at one time been a most eager and ardent adherent
+of the policy of the Native American Party, but that when he saw how
+earnestly and devotedly the Irish had come forward in defence of the
+Union, how brilliantly they had fought, and how recklessly they had
+sacrificed their lives, in 1861, he felt constrained to abandon his
+principles, and to admit their free right to all the privileges of
+American citizenship. I could not, however, but recollect that General
+Richard Taylor, in his most amusing, able, and graphic work on that
+same war, from the Confederate side of the question, bore the strongest
+testimony to the services of the Irish in the army which fought under
+the banner of the Slave States. In New York and in San Francisco
+the Irish element has exercised almost supreme control in municipal
+matters, and it may be said, without offence I hope, that, whether
+it be owing to the opposition they have encountered or to a radical
+deficiency which may be Irish rather than Celtic, their management has
+not conduced to the comfort of the cities or to the pecuniary purity
+of the Executive. In San Francisco there is a strong anti-Irish press
+and much anti-Irish feeling. The 'Argonaut' repudiates the thraldom of
+the Irish associations and factions in the Far West as strenuously as
+the 'Times' and 'Tribune' do in the East. But notwithstanding all that
+may be written and done, it is impossible to resist the influence of
+numbers under a system of suffrage so large as that which exists in
+the greater number of the American States. It was curious to read in
+a Californian paper an appeal to England to suppress Irish agitation.
+"We confidently believe," says the _Argonaut_, "that the wisdom of
+its public men, the healthful condition of its public opinion, and
+the strength of its military power will be sufficient to crush out the
+Land League movement, which is but incipient rebellion. That England
+will deal justly, firmly, and successfully with this effort of united
+ecclesiasticism and Communism is the earnest wish of every intelligent
+and independent mind that believes in free government, the guarantees
+of property, the rights, and the personal liberty of man." However,
+there are American parties, if not statesmen, whose wishes are by no
+means directed to such a consummation, and we must take note of the
+fact.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great courtesy to
+ strangers--Manners and Customs.
+
+ "Westward the course of Empire takes its way;
+ The four first acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day,
+ Time's noblest offspring is the last."
+
+
+The "tar-water Bishop of Cloyne" would have been exceedingly astonished
+could he have seen the first line of his prophecy or averment made to
+do duty as a motto to Mr. Bancroft's History of the United States; but
+surely if the prophecy be not realised, it will be the fault of the
+agencies engaged in working it out--never in the history of mankind,
+as we know it, have such advantages been enjoyed by any nation as have
+been, and are, the appanage of the Americans of European origin in
+the New World. They have leaped into the possession of their heritage
+full armed, like Minerva from the brain of Jove. For them have all
+the champions of human rights died or conquered, and the protagonists
+of human struggles for liberty and light fought. For them Science has
+trimmed her lamp--for them martyrs have died--for them Europe and Asia
+have been in toil and travail for countless generations, and they have
+been guided across the sea to a grand continent where it would seem as
+if Nature had been engaged for myriads of ages to provide for their
+happiness and grandeur--all climes and all products are theirs--the
+bounteous plain, the ore-filled mountain, the treasures of the deep,
+the heaven-made ways by lake and river, and it would be a despair for
+all mankind if they misuse their glorious inheritance, and if all the
+nations of the world see that the pillar of fire in the west was but
+an _ignis fatuus_ dancing before their aching eyes in a Serbonian bog
+of creeds and 'isms, of factions and faiths, all struggling towards
+the gate of the Temple of Mammon. "Philosophers," in all the doubts and
+fears which the condition of the Republic inspires at times, cling with
+confidence to the palladium which is, they think, to be found in the
+system of education based on the free schools of the States. If there
+were not a distinction between knowledge and morality, they would be
+justified; but the Evil One tempted us to eat of the fruit of the tree
+which brought sin into the world, and if Americans are to be trusted
+as authorities, the result of the largest and most liberal system of
+education ever devised is not as happy in practice as it ought to be
+according to theory.
+
+As the central Government extended its sway over the Territories there
+was a uniform system, when assigning land for public objects to railway
+companies, of retaining for the School Fund a portion of the land
+in each Territory, as it was settled and admitted as such, under the
+control of the central Government. In the States Constitutions creating
+Sovereign States, there are provisions inserted, varying very little in
+language and not at all in spirit, which render it compulsory on the
+Legislature of each State to maintain public schools free to all the
+children of the people residing within its borders. Another principle,
+of universal application, provided that all schools under public
+control should be free from sectarian or denominational teaching, in
+the schools or in the books used for educational purposes. With such
+safeguards for the extension of education, it is depressing to find
+that, in certain districts at all events, crime and immorality prevail
+in the United States as extensively as in the benighted kingdoms of the
+Continent of Europe. But the most serious consideration in connection
+with the system of common schools in America, is the fact that serious
+doubts are intruding themselves respecting the success of it. In a
+recent official report it was stated that whereas the children who
+ought to go to school numbered about fourteen and a half millions, the
+average attendance was not more than five millions. But, assuming that
+all the children went to school, there are people who declare that the
+education given under the National system is by no means satisfactory.
+Mr. R. G. White affirms that the system is a failure; and high
+authorities assert that "any comparison between the results obtained
+in the public schools of New York, Cincinnati, and Boston, with those
+of such public grammar schools of England, as Bedford, Manchester, and
+the City of London, is simply ridiculous." The teachers are continually
+shifting, and when the teachers, as they do in this land of liberty,
+go away, the schools are deserted, the constant services of a staff
+cannot be retained unless there is very considerable increase in the
+rate of payment now made to the male and female teachers. None of these
+in any State have, I think, more than about 9_l._ per month. Mr. White
+says that "the mass of the pupils of the public schools are unable to
+read intelligently, to spell correctly, to write legibly, to describe
+the geography of their own country, or do anything that reasonably well
+educated children do with ease; and they cannot write a simple letter,
+they cannot do readily a simple sum in practical arithmetic, they
+cannot tell the meaning of any but the commonest of words they read and
+spell so ill. They can give rules glibly, they can recite from memory,
+they have some dry knowledge of the various ologies and osophies,
+they can, some of them, read a little French or German with very bad
+accent; but, as to all real education, they are as helpless and as
+barren as if they had never crossed the threshold of a schoolhouse."
+It is from American writers that these accusations against the common
+school system are to be gleaned. Some statisticians say that crime and
+pauperism are increasing far more rapidly than population. The charge
+on the State for punishing criminals and keeping paupers last year was
+$20,000,000, or £4,000,000; but it is too much to attribute crime and
+pauperism to the defects of the schools. It might with more reason be
+argued that the teaching of the people in the schools tends to develop
+the looseness and eccentricity of thought, where there is no religious
+teaching, which are exemplified in the uprising of extraordinary sects
+and strange philosophies; for America is the land of spiritualists,
+mesmerism, soothsaying, and mystical congregations. Mr. Hepworth Dixon
+may not be a perfectly unimpeachable authority on the subject of the
+number of spiritualists in America; but there can be no question they
+are to be counted by millions. It is averred that believers in spirits
+generally believe in "special affinities which imply a spiritual
+relation of the sexes higher and holier than that of marriage." It is
+not wonderful then that there should be also a very large number of
+divorces, especially in the New England States. Mr. Nutting says that
+"in the history of nations there has never but thrice occurred such
+a breaking up of the family tie as is now taking place, especially in
+Rhode Island and Connecticut, among the people of New England blood."
+Mormonism, although of American origin and early growth, has been
+mainly successful by the constant importation of ignorant peasants from
+Europe.
+
+There is a want of reverence on the part of children towards their
+parents which is very striking. Americans who have admitted and
+deplored this have sought to account for it by the school system,
+wherein the State usurps the place of the parent, and teaches the young
+idea to mock at any authority but that of the schoolmaster. It would be
+lamentable to have to admit that free education is associated with the
+weakening of parental influence. Theoretically, there is nothing in the
+American system to prevent the teaching of religious and moral duties
+by parents at home; but it would seem as if very little of that kind
+of instruction was given by the busy fathers and anxious mothers of the
+Republic, and that when the day's work is done at school, and some time
+given to the preparation of the studies for the day to follow, there is
+no further teaching.
+
+I do not think the rule "By their fruits shall ye know them" can be
+applied to the public schools, in connection with the prevalence of
+crime, immorality, unbelief, or eccentric religion. But it is certain
+the system has not by any means secured that high level of general
+education, or what education is supposed to bring with it, which its
+friends claim for it in the States. There is reason to believe that
+the standard of morality has not been uniformly high in the political
+world, and that in the public intelligence the judiciary does not
+aspire to an absolute immunity from suspicion. Even in the old settled
+States, legislators from time to time may be found, who, seated among
+the good and wise, excite admiration akin to that which is aroused by
+the spectacle of a fly in amber. It has been observed by travellers
+that whatever affection may exist in families, it does not attain that
+keen sensibility and lasting power which is found in French domestic
+life.
+
+When American newspapers of the greatest influence and circulation
+write invectives against the corruption which prevails in places
+high and low, when writers of great intelligence and known character
+contribute similar articles to periodicals which possess the highest
+position in the literary world of America, a stranger may be permitted
+perhaps to say a few words respecting the impression produced upon
+his mind by what he heard and read on the subject when he was in
+the country, without it being alleged that he attempts to assail
+the principles of free government, or to make invidious charges or
+wholesale accusations against a nation. I know too well the force with
+which Americans could retort if they were so minded, and how they could
+point to the reports of election judges which set forth the prevalence
+of extensive bribery, led to the suspension of writs, and will perhaps
+end in the disfranchisement of some ancient and populous boroughs and
+constituencies in England, and to the speeches of Sir Henry James in
+Parliament, to cast any stone out of my glass house on that score;
+but I do not think it can be established that persons in a position
+at all analogous to that of the members of a State Legislature have
+been purchased wholesale in England, Ireland or Scotland, or that even
+a complete Borough Corporation had been bought up. Now, nothing was
+more common in the Far West than to hear it stated openly that Senator
+So-and-so had bought his place, and that Mr. So-and-so had purchased
+a State Legislative body in order to "get through" some railway or
+other scheme. That was accepted in fact as a matter of course, and
+not contradicted or questioned by any one. We heard from time to time
+of the sums which So-and-so would expend to buy his senatorship, and
+of the money actually paid to secure the passage of a line from the
+legislature of O---- and the like, whilst stories relating to the
+purchase of judges were common in the conversation of the hotels and
+cars.
+
+I do not aver that these stories were true. I only know that they
+passed current and were not challenged by those who were around us.
+"Thoughtful persons," who exist in the United States as well as in
+the vicinity of Pall Mall clubs, lament, deplore and hate the evils
+of growing corruption with all the fervour of honest and powerless
+natures. The mechanism is scarcely concealed. It stands before the
+world with less attempt at disguise than the gallows in the gaol. Mr.
+Parton, in the 'North American Review' of this July, writing on the
+power of public plunder, says: "At present, in the ninety-fifth year
+of the Constitution, we are face to face with a state of politics of
+extreme simplicity, of which money is the motive, the means and the
+end. What was the last Presidential election but a contest of purses?
+The longest purse carried the day, and it carried the day because it
+was the longest. Some innocent readers perhaps have wondered why the
+famous orators who swayed vast multitudes day after day and night after
+night, have not been recognised in the distribution of office. They
+were paid in cash from ten dollars a night to a thousand dollars a
+week." And then he goes on to describe the business in detail, and to
+show what this power is. He says: "There is a boss in the city of New
+York who will take a contract for putting a gentleman into Congress.
+Pay him so much and you may go to sleep, wake up and find yourself
+member elect. A boss is a man who can get to the polls on election
+days masses of voters who care little or nothing for the issues of the
+campaign and know of them still less. They operate upon the strangers
+in the land who are unable to use its language and are unacquainted
+with its politics." Mr. Parton describes with humour one of these
+"bosses," an improvement on the pugilists and cormorant thieves of a
+remote period. "The Emerald Isle gave him birth; the streets of New
+York, education. To see the brawny, good-tempered Irishman walking
+abroad in his district when politics are active is to get an idea
+of how the chief of a clan strode his native heath when a marauding
+expedition was on foot. He lives in a handsome house, and has more
+property than any man has ever been able to get by legitimate service
+to the United States. He treats his dependants and retainers nobly, but
+as the agent and organiser of spoliation he is a prey to every minor
+scoundrel, for at certain seasons he dare not say no to any living
+creature. And yet it requires tact, self-possession and resource to
+move about among needy people with a pocket full of money, an embodied
+"yes," and have some of it left after the election. The strikers, as
+they are called, go for solid cash now instead of target companies and
+clambakes for which the candidates paid the bills." "Money, money,"
+exclaims Mr. Parton, "everywhere in politics, in prodigal abundance,
+money, except where it could secure and reward good service for the
+public, hecatombs for the wolves, precarious bones for the watchdogs."
+The details in the article are precise, and if they are to be trusted
+it may be doubted whether the claims of the United States to possess
+a cheap government can be maintained, for it is not cheap to pay
+responsible executive officers a precarious pittance per annum if
+now and then it costs a million dollars to change them. Mr. Secretary
+Blaine has thrice declared that the election in October 1880 in the
+State of Maine, a model New England State, was carried by money. His
+opponents declared that he and his party were as bad, and that they
+too flooded the towns with money. What renders the situation more
+dangerous is the fact that the men who provide the money for running
+these enormously expensive political combinations are either seekers
+after, or holders of, office, and the inference is that they seek to
+control Government, or, as Mr. Parton puts it, that "the Government
+is coming to be rather an appendage to a circle of wealthy operators
+than a restraint upon them." That is indeed a serious proposition, and
+the result of observation goes to support the idea that it is valid.
+The small man is in office, but the big man, his master, is outside.
+The mischief is brought prominently forward in connection with the
+sale of public lands in the North-West, which have been claimed as the
+heritage of the people, and indeed of all the nations of the world. The
+government land attracted the hardy labour of all countries, covering
+the western west with thriving towns and populous counties. But now
+the prairies are skinned by rich men, by "land-grabbers," people who
+buy up tracts of twenty thousand or thirty thousand acres wherever
+they can lay their hands upon them, evading the law and filling the
+western world with roving labourers who work on these prodigious farms
+in summer and starve in winter. This is, we are told, the result of
+"government by lobby."
+
+Occasionally there is an exceeding great and bitter cry over all this
+from the depths of the body politic. Some great paper in a moment of
+deep mental agony publishes an article like that, to which I have
+called attention, by Mr. Parton; occasionally some preacher, nobly
+daring, thinks it necessary to direct attention, from his pulpit, to
+the progress of corruption. Dr. Talmage delivered a very remarkable
+discourse whilst I was in America on the text from Job. xv. 34: "Fire
+shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." Although I do not profess
+exactly to understand to what particular sect he belongs, he is one of
+the leaders of religious thought, dividing with Beecher and others the
+popular favour in the Empire City. The State buildings at Albany ought
+to be heavily insured if the reverend gentleman's vaticinations are
+right. It was an American discourse. I cannot give the whole oration.
+The people of the Brooklyn Tabernacle were presented with a muster-roll
+of the people who had distinguished themselves amongst the great ones
+of the world. Cobden, Brougham, O'Connell and Rowland Hill were placed
+in juxtaposition as leaders on our side of the water. Of course it was
+impossible to resist the allusion to Francis Bacon and to Macclesfield;
+but it was scarcely correct to say that the Lord Chancellor
+Whiteberry--I presume a misprint for Westbury--"perished," nor do I
+quite understand what the preacher meant by the awful tragedy of the
+_Credit Mobilier_. Washington, Ben Butler, and John McClean were linked
+together for the benefit of Americans. They were, Dr. Talmage declared,
+great politicians, but "out of politics there has come one monstrous
+sin, potent and pestiferous, its two hands rotten with leprosy,
+its right hand deep in its breeches pocket. This is bribery." Dr.
+Talmage called upon the American people to judge the crime. "Under the
+temptation of this sin," he exclaimed, "Benedict Arnold sold the fort
+in the Highlands for thirty-one thousand three hundred and seventy-five
+dollars; Gorgy betrayed Hungary, Ahitophel forsook David, Judas killed
+Christ. I think," he says, "when I see the strong men who have gone
+down, of the Red Dragon in Revelation, having seven heads and ten
+horns, and seven crowns upon its head, drawing the third part of the
+stars of heaven after it." And therefore he proceeds to preach against
+bribery. He thought it was the right time, "because the Legislature
+in New York is busy in investigating charges of bribery. The whole
+country woke up in holy horror at the charge that two thousand dollars
+had been offered to influence a vote in the Legislature, as if this
+was something new; as though in one State nine hundred and seventy-five
+thousand dollars had not been paid a legislator of the State Government
+by a railway company to get its charter and secure a dedication of
+public lands; as though three-quarters of the legislators of the United
+States had not, through bribery, gone into putrefaction whose stench
+reached heaven. After a few weeks' hunting the squirrel has stolen the
+hickory nut. Gentlemen in New York hunt out wrong by day and play poker
+and old sledge at night at Delavan House. It was like the country which
+had spent six millions of dollars in lawsuits about William Tweed going
+suddenly into hysterics when it found out that he had stolen a box of
+steel pens. California is submerged in the grip of a great monopoly; in
+Kansas United States senators had been involved in charges of bribery;
+in Connecticut an election to Congress was bought as men might buy
+a box of strawberries. Last year they were convicted of attempting
+bribery in Pennsylvania, but the Court of Pardons liberated them with
+the exception of two judges, who were told that they would be cut off
+from political preferment for their obstinacy. A Pennsylvania United
+States senator used to put a price on legislators just as a Kentuckian
+puts a price on his horse." But it was not legislators alone that Dr.
+Talmage attacked. He declared that the railways, the common carriers
+of the country, were tainted by a favouritism which was, in fact,
+the result of bribery. One company made rebates in its fares to some
+favoured corporation, as in the case of a petroleum company, which
+was enabled to control the price of that light all over the world in
+consequence of a virtual monopoly that was given to it by arrangement
+with the railway. In the same way merchandise in grain, provisions,
+and cattle are placed in the hands of a few firms. "How much," asks
+Dr. Talmage, "did it cost the Elevated Railroad to keep the fare from
+dropping to five cents from ten cents? I have been told," said he,
+"three hundred thousand dollars," which is 60,000_l._ "Very seldom
+does a bill pass through any of our Legislatures if there be no money
+in it. Sometimes the bribery is in bank bills, sometimes in railroad
+passes, sometimes in political preferment, sometimes by the monopolies
+given to the legislators, what are called points, a corner, a flier, a
+cover, washing the street, salting down, ten up! If you want to know
+what these are, ask the bribed members at Albany and Harrisburg."
+Then he goes on, with some truth, to declare that the bribery begins
+far away behind all this; that it is really with the money subscribed
+for election expenses that the evil begins its course. "From the big
+reservoirs of subscribed election expenses the little rills roll down
+in ten thousand directions, and by the time the great gubernatorial,
+congressional, and presidential elections are over, the land is drunk
+with bribery." Perhaps it is quite as well that it is from an American
+orator and from an American writer such statements and such indictments
+proceed, rather than from a stranger like myself; but it is very clear
+that the evil which De Tocqueville indicated long ago has spread rather
+than diminished, and there is reason to think that it will do so until
+the public conscience of a great people is aroused to a sense of the
+enormity of the mischief. But it lies far down towards the base of
+the national institutions, and any attempt to extirpate it will fail
+until the doctrines of the "Spoils to the Victors" be rejected from the
+political catechism, and the interests of party made the means and not
+the end of political life.
+
+The letters which appeared in the _Morning Post_, written under
+the influence of the surprise and anger I felt at the extent and
+impunity of crimes of violence and the state of feeling, or want of
+it, respecting them in the West, were badly received in America, and
+were severely handled by a few papers, as I was informed; I expected
+that the mention of the subject would not prove agreeable, though
+I guarded myself most sedulously from a single offensive word--nay,
+went out of my way to palliate the offences against life and living,
+and to excuse the people who allowed them, whilst I most carefully
+drew the line--a broad one--between these border ruffians and the
+law-abiding, virtuous people of the settled States. I was not, however,
+prepared for misrepresentation. One would have thought that I accused
+the kind hosts who had received us--our generous entertainers in
+so many cities--the courteous, polished gentlemen who accompanied
+us--of murder and robbery, and ascribed to them the brutal murders
+committed by Canty or the Kid. As I quoted chapter and verse, and as
+the papers which vilified me could not deny the statements, they wrote
+that I had been imposed upon by the vivid fancy--in other phrase,
+the deliberate lying--of their brother editors in the West. One organ
+had the effrontery to declare that the Duke of Sutherland expressed
+his delight at the kind and courteous treatment of the ruffians I
+denounced; adding, "somebody lied--it was not the Duke." No. It was not
+indeed! A friend sent me one of these, and below an article in which it
+was said that I might take my place "beside Basil Hall, Mrs. Trollope,
+and Dickens for libelling the people of the United States," and that
+my stories were all inventions, there was a pregnant commentary as
+follows:--"Sunday, July 17th: Daring Train Robbery; Bandits Boarding
+Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Cars; The Conductor and a Passenger
+Shot Dead, and the Safe in the Express Car Robbed; the Passengers Saved
+by a Brakeman."
+
+I hope it will not be imagined that I have any desire to cast obloquy
+on the grand efforts, supremely successful as they have been, to
+turn the prairie and the desert to the uses of civilised man and
+of the world, and to open up the Western Continent to humanity and
+civilisation. I am too sensible of the courtesy, ready service, and
+hospitality everywhere accorded to the party of English travellers
+of which I was one, to write one word which I thought calculated to
+give pain or offence to any of our many friends or to any right-minded
+American. _Maculæ solis!_ 'Tis a pity they are there! In a few years,
+perhaps, the memory that such things were will have passed away like
+the recollection of some evil dream. But public sentiment must make
+itself felt, and above all there must be some abatement of the maudlin
+sympathy, which is virtually on the side of crime, if it be active in
+averting punishment.
+
+Crime in America, especially in the Eastern States, is very much
+the same as it is in other countries, but in the far West there is
+more recklessness in dealing with human life, which, in spite of the
+Howard Society and of humanitarians, I believe to be connected with
+the indulgence extended under State laws by American judges and juries
+to criminals who appear to be deserving of nothing but the strict
+and unmitigated application of the rope. "Property" is safe, for the
+citizens hunt down with extraordinary energy marauders whose object is
+simply plunder. Ordinary robbers and gangs of burglars are speedily
+and summarily suppressed. It is otherwise with those who assail life
+and limb. The desperadoes who infest the "saloons," as they are called,
+with which every western settlement is sure to be provided as soon as
+the shingle roofs are placed on the earliest upheaval of deal planks
+which can be called a dwelling, have far greater immunity and freedom
+than burglars or robbers. Wherever the train stopped for water on
+our journey in New Mexico, Western Colorado, or Eastern California, a
+rectangular wooden box, with a verandah, open doors, windows screened
+by a muslin curtain, perhaps a flagstaff with the Stars and Stripes
+flying, a large signboard, and some high-sounding name--the "Grand
+Alliance," "Union League," "El Dorado," "Harmonium," "Arcadia," or
+the like--was visible, with the usual group of booted and bearded
+miners, and their horses hitched up at the door-posts in front; inside
+you would be certain to find men of the same class at a bar, behind
+which, known for miles around, the affable Charlie, Bill, or Bob was
+dispensing drinks and mixing cocktails, slings, and the other drinks,
+in which the badness of the spirit is artfully disguised by a stimulant
+of a more active character and more pronounced flavour, known as
+"bitters," and kept in subjugation by the liberal use of ice. For even
+in these burning regions ice is stored up as the one thing needful. The
+rudest miner is accustomed to it; iced drinks are consumed by classes
+in America far below the social level of those who never taste them in
+this country.
+
+As the train was halting at Colorado Springs the stewards engaged
+in an animated discussion respecting a certain erection of poles and
+rafters just visible in an adjacent field. "I tell you dat's it." "I
+say tidn't." They were discussing the probability of the scaffolding
+being the gallows whereon "Canty, the Buena Vista murderer," was to be
+hanged the day after. On April 29th, last year, Mr. Canty was standing
+on the platform in front of Lake-house with "Johnny the Ham," "Curly
+Frank," and "Off Wheeler," when Thomas Perkins appeared in an alley
+opposite, endeavouring "to induce 'Dutch Bill' to go with him to the
+office of Justice Casey, who had deputised him for the purpose." Canty
+and his companions at once ran across and demanded his release. Before
+Perkins could answer, Canty fired and missed him. The second shot
+wounded Perkins in the arm; the latter drew his pistol, but before he
+could use it Canty fired; the ball shattered the constable's hand. "For
+God's sake," he exclaimed, "is there no policeman to help me?" He fell,
+and Canty, walking close to his side, coolly sent a bullet through
+his body. He was arrested, tried, and convicted. His counsel applied
+to the Supreme Court for a _supersedeas_, but the court, after solemn
+argument, refused the application. Then they applied to the Governor
+of the State, but Mr. Pitkin, though "a weak-kneed man," would neither
+grant a reprieve nor a commutation to imprisonment for life. There
+was, he said, no ground "to set aside a verdict of a competent jury
+and the district judge reviewed and approved of by the Supreme Court."
+In the very last hour a woman came forward, and the Denver paper gave
+_verbatim et literatim_ the text of the document in which ... "with dew
+regard," she offered Sheriff Spangler $50,000 (10,000_l._) to save the
+life of W. H. Canty, her cousin, whose real name was, she said, N. H.
+Salisbury. "I entreat you to have him spared till you have an interview
+with me." She added that "Jennings and his brother in Leadville would
+pay a still larger sum. You may have ample means for life," &c. A
+gentleman of the press, who came into our train at South Arkansas,
+was present at the execution. Just before the drop fell, Canty, who
+had expressed complete confidence in his ultimate liberation till the
+day before his execution, spoke for fifteen minutes, protesting his
+innocence. Then he exclaimed, "Good-bye, nothing can save me. I have
+faith in the Saviour and a hereafter." The trap was sprung, but to the
+horror of every one, the rope broke at the beam. The murderer's neck,
+however, was dislocated, and "a happy relief was experienced" when
+it was found he had died a painless death. As he was the nephew of an
+eminent statesman it was expected his friends would take action as to
+the disposal of his remains, which were put "in a neat casket at the
+sheriff's expense." In the journal there was a woodcut of the murderer.
+"Before his likeness could be taken holes were bored in the door and
+Canty was lashed to it, and then, when the door was set upright, the
+photographer watched a favourable opportunity when the head and eyes
+were quiet and secured the impression" from which the engraving was
+made. He was not so fortunate as Frank Gilbert, who was sentenced to
+be hanged the following day for a brutal murder, but respited, "in
+order that the proceedings may be reviewed by the highest judicial
+tribunal," by Governor Pitkin at the last moment, "till July 29," the
+day on which Rosencrantz is now sentenced to be hanged. The sheriff,
+Judge Ward, the clerk of the court, and the prosecuting attorney
+joined with others in petitions to the governor on the ground that
+the Supreme Court judges had refused a _supersedeas_ in consequence of
+the defects and informalities of the record of the proceedings in the
+court below. Rosencrantz was respited, and the public, who had been
+expecting a double execution on the 18th of June, were disappointed,
+although they were allowed to slake their curiosity by the sight of the
+condemned men and by testing the ropes in the prison enclosure where
+the scaffold was ready. In the paper which gave the text of Governor
+Pitkin's reprieve there was a heading "Done Brown. Al. Huggins,
+marshal of Recene, turns out a bad man. He shoots and fatally wounds
+officer Brown of Kokomo." Phil. Foote, constable of Kokomo, formerly
+marshal of Robinson, and Al. Huggins, marshal of Recene, it seems had
+spent the night in visiting the saloons of Kokomo, and in the early
+morning began to fire their pistols and guns off in the street, and
+continued to do so until Andy Sutton, marshal of Kokomo, attempted to
+arrest them, but failed, "as he was quickly covered by two rifles."
+Mr. Brown, a police officer, asked Huggins to put up his pistol, and,
+to encourage him, proceeded to pocket his own revolver, when Huggins
+took deliberate aim with a 38-calibre Colt and shot Brown in the left
+breast, just above the heart. Huggins and Foote started for Recene.
+The marshal of Kokomo followed quickly in pursuit, with a large body
+of men. Huggins refused to surrender, whereupon the marshal shot him
+in the face. As there was a movement to lynch him, Al. Huggins was
+sent under strong guard to Leadville, but Foote escaped. "Brown was
+not dead by last accounts, but was not expected to live long." Then
+came a long account of another "Denver tragedy. Charles Stickney
+murders Mr. T. Campan and Mrs. H. O. Devereux in a boarding-house."
+Stickney was nephew of ex-Governor Clifford, of Rhode Island, served as
+lieutenant, 20th Regiment, in the war of 1861-4, graduated at Harvard,
+became principal of a school, married a lady whom he sent to London
+to study music, and tried mining whilst his wife was giving music
+lessons in Denver. There she met Mr. Campan, one of the best families
+in Detroit; Stickney shot him and killed a woman who was in the room
+at the same time. "Public opinion is in favour of Stickney, and he will
+probably be reprimanded." The evening of the day we reached Leadville,
+"Alderman Johnnie M'Combe, a leading candidate for lieutenant-governor
+and mayor, and last spring before the people for city treasurer,"
+shot and wounded, probably fatally, a well-known actor named James
+M'Donald, because the latter had taken some children in M'Combe's
+buggy for a drive. It is not easy to determine how far Johnnie's chance
+of office may be affected by this ebullition, but the newspapers did
+not write of it with harshness; one gave it a comic character by the
+heading, "Ex-Alderman M'Combe attempts to perforate Jemmy M'Donald's
+cranium." In my morning paper of the same date I find that "James Hogan
+was foully murdered by James M'Cue in the open streets of Erie this
+afternoon in a quarrel about a handkerchief;" that Dr. Flemings, a
+prominent citizen of Portland, Ashley County, Arkansas, had appeased
+a quarrel between a pedlar named Gillmore and a coloured man very
+effectually, for, "incensed by a remark made by the pedlar, the doctor
+drew a pistol and shot him dead;" that "a prominent business man of
+M'Leansboro' had made a sensation on the streets to-day by hunting
+up, pistol in hand, one of the gay Lotharios of Hamilton County;"
+that "Daniel Keller, deputy county clerk, was stabbed and killed in
+the street of Virginia City by Dennis Hennessy, a kerbstone broker;"
+that "a searching party under Captain Leper had overhauled Hamilton,
+Myers and Brown, the outlaws who shot Sheriff Davis and Collector
+Hatter at Poplar Bluff, Mo.; killed Hamilton, mortally wounded Myers,
+and made Brown a prisoner;" that "James Hurd shot Jeff Anderson at
+Alamosa, Col., and that it was feared the latter would not survive."
+An account of the death of "Curly Bill," a notorious desperado, leader
+of cowboys and murderer of Marshal White, who was killed at Caleyville,
+Arizona, by his comrade, Jem Wallace, followed. They had a quarrel (of
+course, in a saloon). After a few drinks "Curly Bill" said, "I guess
+I will kill you on general principles." Wallace stepped out of the
+saloon and immediately opened fire, inflicting a mortal wound on his
+foe. After a brief hearing Wallace was discharged, and left for parts
+unknown. Then it was related how "Thomas Clarey ('Tommy the Kid'), a
+Durango outlaw, was killed by a comrade named Eskridge at Annego while
+drunk." A fratricide and three trials for murder were duly recorded.
+Another paper gave an account of South-West Colorado from the lips
+of a recent visitor to San Juan County. "Are you going back to San
+Juan? No, I think not; but it is a glorious country. The men there
+are a little rough, and kill each other on slight provocation; but a
+peaceable man who does not swagger and blow is not molested. There is
+no law, and courts and constables are unknown." He narrates how Aleck
+----, acting as a barkeeper, "a noble-hearted, jovial fellow, full of
+fun, who looked you square in the eye, owns mines, said to be worth
+a million," settled a difficulty; I am inclined to think Mr. Charles
+Klunk rather drew on the interviewing reporter of the _Globe Democrat_.
+He was, he said, going to see a stockman who lived about fifty miles
+from the house where he was visiting. A farmer said to him "Come and
+take a drink with me, and I'll show you the barkeeper who killed the
+man you are going to see an hour ago." The stockman had come into
+the saloon whilst Aleck was in the back room, and began to abuse him.
+Aleck heard him, opened on the man with a revolver, and "shot him full
+of holes. Next day I asked him what he was going to do about it, and
+he said he had been tried and acquitted, which meant that some of the
+leading men had told him that he had done right. There was no trial
+about it. When a man kills another out there in a fight they don't
+inquire very strictly into the circumstances, but make up their minds
+that they can't bring the dead man to life by hanging the killer, so
+nothing is done about it. But when a man murders another to rob him,
+the vigilants turn out and have no mercy on him. They just fill his
+skin with lead and tumble him into a hole like a wolf. After all,
+though the bears are plentiful in the spring, you can kill a deer 100
+yards from the house where you like, the streams are alive with trout,
+the vegetables and crops splendid." Mr. Charles Klunk's resolution not
+to go back to this Happy Valley seems founded on sound constitutional
+principles. What I wish to point out is the condition in which the
+Central Government and State Governments have permitted many districts
+of New Mexico, Colorado, and California to remain. It is plain that
+the peculiar conditions under which the sway of the United States has
+been extended over the regions of the Far West have rendered it very
+difficult to establish the machinery for protecting life and property
+and punishing crime; but I do not see that the statesmen at Washington
+or the legislators at the State capitals are very much concerned at
+the reign of terror which prevails on the borders, or that they seek
+to impress on their people any regard for the sacredness of life. In
+fact, human life is almost a drug in the market. And I write fully
+sensible of the failures of our own and of all European Governments to
+repress crime, to prevent violence, and to ensure security to life and
+property. I am aware that Ireland and Poland are to the fore, and that
+wife-beating and "running kicks" illustrate the brutality of Lancashire
+and other districts--that London has its Alsatias, that every European
+capital has foul recesses in which the only laws are those of crime.
+All the world is busy preparing shoals of emigrants for the United
+States. It is only, however, when some savage outbreak affrighting the
+propriety of a great city arouses indignation and fear that there is
+a clamour for measures of repression. I do not think there is in any
+other part of the world, or that there ever has been in any civilised
+country, such shootings as have filled the land to which I allude with
+bloodshed. It may be said with truth that there never have been and
+that there are not any similar conditions in the world. But the absence
+of any great abiding movement for the correction and suppression of
+violence and lawlessness cannot be so readily accounted for or excused.
+There appears to be a sort of admiration for these border ruffians
+among portions of the American Press and public. Even a staid paper
+like the _Republican_, in an article headed "South-East Missouri: the
+Reign of Lawlessness about Ended," on the destruction of the New Madrid
+gang, writes of one who was sent to the penitentiary for thirty years
+"as a living monument of a bold and brave lot of desperate men who had
+started out to make money by robbing their fellow-men. This swift and
+stern justice speaks well for this portion of the States, which has had
+for a long time more than its full quota of these lawless characters.
+Myers and Brown will be hung on the 15th July, and their execution will
+be witnessed by thousands of South-East Missourians." The spectacle
+of the hanging will not do much good, if it be like the execution at
+Colorado Springs, which was advertised as a sort of picnic or pleasure
+excursion. One advertisement ran, "After the hanging to-morrow drink
+La Salle beer; it will cool your nerves." "Highway robbery here has
+about run its course, and the people are determined that lawlessness
+in those regions shall no longer go unwhipped of justice." Very good.
+But, why not sooner and long ago? "Rhodes was hung by Judge Lynch
+when captured at the killing of young Laforge in New Madrid;" but the
+gang killed the sheriff and wounded the deputy-sheriff and collector
+before the people arose in their majesty to squelch them. A criminal
+is invested with a notoriety which, next to popular estimation, is
+valued by some men, and it is noted with interest that "Gilbert" (one
+pitiless murderer) is a Catholic, and that "Rosengrants" (another
+homicide) "inclines towards the Episcopalians." A Leadville doctor
+visits one of them to ask for his body. "No, sirree, you can't have
+my body; I'll be hanged first!" And the public laugh at the lively
+sally, and admire the _sangfroid_ of the wit! In fact, there is a
+_tendresse_ for crime in this grim humour. A Texan who would "fill the
+skin" of a stranger "with lead" for aspersing Texas would no doubt
+heartily enjoy the description of the early population of the Lone
+Star State, which I quote from the Texas Press. "In the early days
+of the Republic, and even after annexation, many of the white men who
+came here had strong sanitary reasons for a change of climate, having
+been threatened with throat disease so sudden and dangerous that the
+slightest delay in moving to a new and milder climate would have been
+fatal, the subjects dying of dislocation of the spinal vertebræ at the
+end of a few minutes--and a rope. A great many left Arkansas, Indiana,
+and other States in such a hurry that they were obliged to borrow the
+horses on which they rode to Texas. They mostly recovered on reaching
+Austin, and many invalids began to feel better and consider themselves
+out of danger as soon as they crossed the Brancos River. Some who would
+not have lived twenty-four hours longer had they not left their homes
+reached a green old age in Western Texas, and were never again in risk
+of the bronchial affection already referred to by carefully avoiding
+the causes which led to their trouble. Some at Austin recovered so
+far as to be able to run for office, within a year, though defeated
+by a respectable majority, owing to the atmosphere and the popularity
+of the other candidate." The most extraordinary fact connected with
+the indulgence which is extended to Western excesses is the severity
+with which Northern and Eastern writers and publicists deal with
+the recklessness of Southerners with regard to life, as if it were a
+political question in some way connected with slavery. In an article on
+"Colonisation," in the July number of 'The International Review,' there
+is an attempt to prove that the prevalence of homicide in the South as
+compared with the North has impeded the flow of immigrants, although
+slavery has disappeared, and the writer, quoting Mr. Redfield's book
+on 'Homicide North and South,' says the terrible "scourge of open
+murder, wholly irrespective of political causes more deadly than
+disease or yellow fever, because each death is the result of a heinous
+crime, seems to be calmly accepted by public opinion as a part of
+the unchangeable conditions of social life in the South. In Kentucky
+more men are killed in six days than in eight years in Vermont. In a
+village of Connecticut a death from homicide has never occurred from
+its foundation, while in one graveyard in Owen County, Kentucky, the
+majority are murdered men, and in another county forty-two persons
+were killed and forty-three wounded in two years." But in the very same
+number of the 'International' there is an account of the doings of the
+"Vigilance Committee" of San Francisco (where there were no slaves and
+where there is immense wealth), which might cause the author of the
+paper on "Colonisation" to reflect a little on his theories. Surely in
+Arizona, California, &c., where the foreign population is 50 per cent.
+of the natives, immigration has not been checked by the prevalence of
+homicide? It must not be supposed that there is no "law" in the towns
+where these crimes have been committed; in all the cases referred to
+the coroner did his office and verdicts were returned, and it will have
+been seen that "wretches hang" in due course. We had intended to visit
+the State prison at Cañon City on our way to Pueblo from Leadville,
+where we were promised an opportunity of seeing "thirty murderers all
+in a row," but the delay of the train on the road deprived us of the
+means of verifying the statement, and I give it as it was made. It
+would seem as if the criminal supply were super-abundant, or that death
+on the gallows had no deterrent influence. The chances of escape are,
+if not numerous, at least considerable. At Deming, Denver, Leadville,
+Tucson, Tombstone, and other cities, the vast mass of the inhabitants
+are law-abiding, peaceable, honest, and honourable men, who feel as
+much horror at the violence and bloodshed around them as the most
+refined lady in any saloon of Boston, Paris, or London, but they appear
+to endure these things in the hope that the law will be enforced at
+last; now and then they break into vigilance committees and execute
+their own decrees, though the judges do not fail to lay it down that
+they have been accessories to murder. The great civiliser and police
+agent is the railroad. It is affirmed that as the iron way is pushed on
+the outlaws and the _personnel_ of outlawry congregate at the terminal
+town, but I suspect that there is a fringe of the material left on the
+border as it runs. As our party were at dinner in the palace-car one
+evening the train pulled up at a station. There was a group of rough
+men on the platform, who stared in with all their eyes at the white
+tablecloth, set with bright glass and silver, and at the cheerful faces
+under the lamps. "How merry they are. I wonder if they know that this
+is Dodge City?" exclaimed one of the crowd. I was told by an official
+that when they were making a railway in these parts the surveyors, &c.,
+were much troubled by gangs of gamblers and robbers, who impeded the
+work and debauched the men, so after due warning they made a razzia
+on the gamblers, shot a lot of them, and the rest "vamosed." There was
+not very long ago an actual war in the Grand Cañon Valley between the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railway and the Denver and Rio Grande
+Railway, in which there was an array of armed forces and fighting on
+both sides, and we saw with our own eyes the remains of the breastworks
+cast up in the Grand Cañon by the belligerents. The law came in at
+last. "One side got at the judge first and gave him $50,000. The
+other was quite ready to go beyond that, but the first was too quick,
+and the suit went against the company." I was talking to a lawyer
+about the length of time which is allowed by the judges to criminals
+sentenced to death as a detail of the execution of the law not in
+accordance with the general practice of civilised nations, when one
+of the company remarked, "They must do it, sir, to please the people.
+If we had Judas Iscariot in gaol to-morrow there would be thousands
+of petitions to commute his sentence, and thousands of dollars ready
+for an appeal to the Supreme Court. Our people don't like prompt
+sentence." Nevertheless, sentence and execution are pretty swift when
+the desperadoes take the law into their own hands, as we have seen.
+The revolver and the "saloon" are the agents and the scene in most of
+these murders, and whisky is too often the motive power. In Kansas it
+is a criminal offence to sell any intoxicating spirit, or to use it
+except on medical certificate. It is said that the law cannot last, but
+it surely was a very strong conviction of the evils which were endured
+by the community that brought a State Legislature, elected by the
+people, to enact that beer, wine, and spirits should be absolutely and
+entirely banished from its borders. Lately there was a prosecution by
+the State attorney of a man for selling spirits. The case was clearly
+proved. The judge charged the jury in the strongest manner against the
+defendant. The jury without retiring at once found a verdict of "not
+guilty." "Boys," exclaimed the judge, putting his hand on the foreman's
+shoulder, "Boys, I'm quite with you." The Kansas case will be, I think,
+watched with great interest by the rival parties in England, and it is
+certainly worth investigation and attention, for, if all I hear be true
+here, a Parliament elected by the people either in advance or in the
+rear of their constituents have passed a law which judges condemn, and
+juries evade, and public opinion derides.
+
+From a British, which may be an unintelligent, point of view, there
+is a want of logical method in the treatment of the Great Rebellion
+question by Americans. There is a general disposition to speak of the
+war between the Federal Government and the people of the Confederate
+States as an historical fact which has ceased to present burning
+controversies and terrible issues to the Republic. But, at the same
+time, these controversies are kept alive, and, for the defeated, are
+stirred up incessantly by anniversaries and celebrations, natural but,
+if it be the object of Americans, as many of them assure us it is,
+to let the memory of the past die out like that of a horrid dream,
+impolitic. The spirit which animated the Southern States is neither
+dead nor sleeping. But there are no end of G. A. P. and G. A. R.
+Associations flourishing their banners and waving their sheathed swords
+in and out of the newspapers, and it is almost more than Southern
+flesh and blood can bear at times to be reminded of the defeats they
+sustained, even if they be content to admit that the doctrine of the
+sovereignty of States was a delusion, and that the indivisibility of
+the Republic was a fundamental principle of the Constitution before it
+was conclusively established by force of arms.
+
+North and South, our good cousins are fond of anniversaries and
+speechmakings. I wonder where they get their taste for them from?
+Some few veterans dine together on anniversaries of old French war
+days, and there is a Balaclava Dinner in the Old Country; but, though
+we have a reasonably long list of fighting successes to commemorate,
+their anniversaries are mostly left to the almanacks. The other day
+the Americans had a celebration of the Battle of Cowpens, wherein the
+heroic Morgan gave the diabolical Tarleton the deuce of a whipping. I
+wonder if it was worth remembering? But it is better to remember such
+things perhaps than Sherman's Raid or Wilderness--or Chickahominy.
+There are bitternesses enough remaining--the rivalries and jealousies
+of generals are still active and these memories might be left to die
+out.
+
+The great war which so deeply moved the population of the United States
+has left many traces in Soldiers' Homes, and men deprived of legs or
+arms, or bearing marks of indelible wounds, are to be met with wherever
+there is any considerable gathering of people all over the Union. The
+clerk at the bar of the hotel, to whom we were talking a moment ago,
+was a captain in a regiment of militia, and served with distinction,
+having risen to the grade he occupies by conduct and courage during the
+war; and if he is known among his friends by the title of "Colonel,"
+he deserves, probably, the brevet conferred upon him by the authority
+of the general public around him. The conductor of the train on the
+Pennsylvania Railroad, to whose attention we were so much indebted, was
+an ex-officer of volunteers, was engaged at the first battle of Bull
+Run, where he was wounded, and in several other actions. And our good
+friend the Major, who enabled us to pass many an hour listening to his
+admirable rendering of negro minstrelsy, bore in his body a proof of
+the dangers he had passed, in the shape of a Confederate bullet, or
+it might have been (for I am not quite sure now) a projectile of the
+Federal persuasion. And so on. Scarcely a day passed that we did not
+meet someone who had been fighting on one side or the other.
+
+One great change has come over Americans since I was last here, and,
+whether it was the ridicule to which they were exposed or to a sense
+of their greatness as a nation that it be due, it is to be commended.
+Except by a professional interviewer, not one of the party was asked,
+"What do you think, sir, of our country?"!
+
+The welcome which an Englishman who is entitled to admission into
+good society receives all over the States, in the best houses, and
+from the best men, is as gracious and warm as ever. It seems as if a
+reaction against the suspicion, jealousy, and harshness which marred
+the political relations of the Republic and Great Britain in times gone
+by, moved those who behave with so much courtesy to Englishmen, and
+that they seem to say, _sotto voce_, "Come and see how I forget the
+wrongs done to the United States by the Ministers of George III. and
+his successors! Admit that I can be as magnanimous as I am rich and
+cultivated! I am of your house, but I have transplanted all the good
+qualities of your race to American soil, and grafted them on the tree
+of liberty which towers aloft in all the splendour of Transatlantic
+luxuriance above us."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the
+ Maori.
+
+
+On the 5th of May the party visited Carlisle Fort or Barracks, one of
+the ancient military establishments of the Republic, where in the old
+times, speaking in an American sense, a considerable force was usually
+concentrated to keep watch and ward over the western frontiers, now
+extended thousands of miles away to the Pacific. The Barrack, which
+is a large quadrangle capable of containing a couple of regiments, is
+appropriated by the Government to this great experiment, the systematic
+education of the Indians of both sexes, whose families send them to
+school for the purpose of learning English and useful arts, mechanical
+and other, which may be of advantage to their people. It was, perhaps,
+one of the most interesting of the many little excursions which the
+Duke of Sutherland and his friends made in the States, and as it was
+the only one of the schools which we had an opportunity of seeing I
+shall proceed to give a little account of what we witnessed. In the
+first place let me express the sense which every one of us entertained
+of the real sterling qualities of Captain Pratt who is in charge of
+the school, and of the devotion and solicitude for their charges of
+those ladies employed in the training establishment. It may be asked
+how casual visitors could judge of these things? The discipline,
+order, progress, and perfect method visible in every room, and the
+intelligence and good understanding between the teachers and the pupils
+which could be perceived throughout the establishment, were adequate
+proofs, I think, that the praise is well deserved. At the time of our
+visit there were something under three hundred pupils, of whom perhaps
+two hundred were boys, and these were engaged in their class-rooms,
+each section of Indians being arranged according to nationality, if
+such a term can be used. But, indeed, the tribes of Indians differed
+from each other in personal appearance far more than do the races
+which inhabit the European continent. It is true they nearly all have
+straight wire-like black hair and eyes set deeply and rather obliquely
+in faces which are frequently of the Mongol type. But there is great
+diversity in the shape of the head, the angle of the jaw, the formation
+of the mouth and nose, the colour (when not tainted or "improved" by
+an admixture of European blood, whether Mexican or American or other)
+being pretty uniform, a rich bronze, with something of a copper hue,
+predominating in the young people. The boys were dressed in a plain
+neat uniform of greyish-blue, military tunics and trousers, well shod
+and comfortably equipped in all respects. The girls, amongst whom,
+perhaps, taste for eccentric finery was not unobservable, wore dresses
+less uniform in appearance, generally neat and always clean; but
+their foot gear was rather eccentric. The rooms, spacious barrack-like
+apartments, well ventilated, were appropriated to the classes according
+to age and progress, the boys being separated from the girls. The walls
+were hung with maps and furnished with educational coloured prints, and
+boards for arithmetical exercises were in each apartment. The desks and
+stools were such as would be seen in an ordinary school, and if one had
+not looked at the faces of the pupils and been struck by some of the
+strange characters on the walls he would have thought himself in the
+middle of some ordinary school; save, perhaps, that his ear would have
+missed the curious humming noise which marks the industry of idleness
+or of legitimate work in similar establishments in Europe. But here
+were all these young savages, poring over their books or boring with
+their pens, looking up at the visitors scarcely with curiosity and
+applying themselves again to their work, or answering questions put
+to them with the composure which must be a portion of the Red Man's
+nature.
+
+I cannot recollect how many tribes there were represented at the
+Carlisle school; but I was struck by the race-distinctions which could
+be observed when Captain Pratt, standing on a raised platform, called
+out the names of each tribe. The little batches, in some instances
+only one or two, stood up briskly and looked somewhat proudly about,
+as much as to say, "We are Sioux (or Apaches, or Ponchas, or Creeks),
+not like these other fellows." And the young ladies were, if one might
+judge from their expression, quite as proud of their own people as the
+boys. But the names these poor children receive are ludicrous. Not
+content with calling them by English names, or American, singularly
+misapplied, very often, as a name may be, their own Indian nomenclature
+is translated into English, so that we heard reading and reciting
+beside "Luke Phillips" and "Almarine McKillip" (a Scotch Creek)
+"Maggie Stands-looking" and "Reuben Quick-bear." There was something
+of sarcasm, I think, in the address of a Creek boy to the visitors. He
+said: "The Indian boys had come here to learn something about the use
+of the bow and hunting. Their people believed that if boys grew up to
+manhood without learning they would be of no use; therefore they had
+sent the boys here to get education." Then, after some moral if trite
+reflections, the lad said: "You must understand that nearly everything
+that was made was made both for the present and the future. This
+barracks was not built for Indians, as I do not think the men who built
+it ever thought that it would be an Indian school; but things were made
+to do good both in the present and in the future." And then quoth he,
+looking at his white friends straight in the face: "The education which
+we are getting here is not like our own land, but it is something that
+cannot be stolen nor bought from us." And the white man did not turn
+red at the words! I do not pretend to judge of the actual progress made
+in learning, but the very intelligent self-possessed teachers reported
+uniformly that they were satisfied. The most useful education, perhaps,
+which these Indians receive is in practical mechanics, and a visit to
+the workshops attached to the barracks was amply repaid by the sight
+of these industrious young fellows hammering and leathering away in
+the various departments. They have actually completed waggons of a most
+satisfactory construction, complete in all their parts, so much so that
+orders have been received for as many as can be supplied for the use
+of Agencies. They make and repair their own shoes. They have sent out
+a hundred and twenty double sets of harness. They make coffee-boilers,
+cups, pans, pails, and all the articles known to the tin-smith; and the
+girls are taught to hem and sew and knit in the English fashion; but it
+must have been not many a long year before the white man landed, when
+the ancestors of these Indian maidens exercised the same mystery with
+fine sinew and skin in the wonderful work of which specimens are handed
+down to us to-day. On one point alone, perhaps, there was something to
+regret; the health of the children was not all that could be desired.
+Well clad, regularly fed, I presume on wholesome food, cleanly lodged
+in well-ventilated rooms, these wild children of the plains scarcely
+came up to the expectations one would form of them in the matter of
+chest-measurement; and although many were remarkable for fine physical
+development, Captain Pratt confessed that their sanitary condition was
+not everything that could be desired, and that losses from consumption
+and other causes were rather serious. But they have plenty of out-door
+exercise. They have games in which they rejoice. They drill and
+march to the sound of their own band, a very good brass band of eight
+performers, each of a different tribe, who played "Hail Columbia!"
+and the "Star-Spangled Banner," and the like, with energy and zest;
+nay, with harmonious concurrence. When we went out into the large open
+square, there appeared before us a wonderful being in feathers, waving
+plumes, wampum and all the leathern panoply and peltry adornments of
+an Indian, painted, and armed with bow and arrow, probably such an one
+as Captain John Smith may have seen as he went exploring the woods
+of Virginia on his way to the sacrifice from which he was saved by
+Pocahontas. A target was erected at a distance of a hundred yards or
+so, and had I been in the centre of it, I should have been perfectly
+safe from the arrows which the Indian warrior discharged at it. But
+we were told that with a good bow a strong-armed Indian will drive an
+arrow right through a buffalo, and in that case I would suppose that
+the buffalo was very near to him indeed.
+
+Of course it is but natural to find very varying degrees of
+intelligence amongst the pupils, and the rate of progress was by no
+means uniform, but a committee of examination which recently visited
+the school declared that the manifestations of advancement in the
+rudiments of English education were to them simply surprising. It was
+with admiration bordering on amazement they observed the facility and
+accuracy with which the children passed through the various exercises,
+in reading, geography, arithmetic, and writing, of the schoolroom;
+the accurate training and the amount of knowledge displayed were, they
+reported, the fullest proof not only of skilful teaching, but of great
+aptitude and diligence on the part of the children. Considering the
+brief period during which the school had been in operation, and the
+fact that the children entered it in a wholly untutored condition,
+the evidence was conclusive of the capability of culture. They go on
+to say: "We are fully persuaded that improvement equal to that which
+we have witnessed in the case of these children of the plains, if
+made in equal time by American children, would be regarded as quite
+unusual. And when the difficulty of communication consequent upon the
+diversities of language is taken into account we can but feel that the
+results of which we have been the witnesses to-day justify our judgment
+of them as amazing."
+
+One of the most interesting features connected with the attempts
+to educate the Indians at Carlisle is the 'School News,' a little
+publication which, as I understand, is conducted by Indian pupils
+taught in the establishment, edited by Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee Indian
+boy. It is published once a month, and costs 25 cents or 1_s._ per
+year. It takes as its motto the lines:
+
+ "A pebble cast into the sea is felt from shore to shore,
+ A thought from the mind set free will echo on for ever more."
+
+Perhaps neither the metre nor the actual statement commend themselves
+to acceptance, but the matter of the little journal is full of
+interest. In the first place the names of the contributors afford
+full matter for meditation. Perhaps it is one of the steps which
+must be taken to civilise these poor Indians that their names should
+undergo a strange and, to me, unmeaning metamorphose. There seems no
+reason whatever why the Indian names should not be retained, or if
+there is any reason for changing them, at least there might be some
+discrimination and good taste exercised in the adoption of English
+Christian names.
+
+The first number of the 'School News,' which I have before me, contains
+as an article: "What Michael Burns, an Apache boy, thinks on the Indian
+Question." He says, "I cannot help myself, having much feeling for my
+people, what has been said about them, and the efforts making to give
+us the same privileges as the people of the United States. And it is
+said how we have been treated by the bad white man, for the last ten
+or fifteen years, decreasing our number. But that kind for treatment
+for my nation will soon stop." The poor boy goes on to say: "There is
+no doubt that we are in fault. We had the opinion that we could not
+get beaten by any other nation. Now we know for ourselves that we will
+have to change.... But how does the white man know which way is the
+best to do. Was he born that way? No! Education gives him the light
+of knowledge." Then a boy named Marcus Poko writes to his father: "I
+want you to try hard and leave the Comanche way, and to find the white
+man's way." In the leading article, written, I presume, by Samuel
+Townsend, it is said: "Indian ways will never be good any more, it
+is all passed, gone away, and the other way is coming up to take the
+place. We shall all be glad when we all get into the civilised way of
+living, then the Indians will not make so much trouble for the American
+people. Some people say 'let the Indians get out of the way. There
+is no use in trying to advance them, kill them all they are like the
+wild animals deaf and dumb, they never will learn anything. We have
+already paid so much money for them they have never become civilised
+yet.' But all good people say, 'Oh, yes, give them an education and
+plenty of opportunities, and send more teachers among them so they may
+come up beside us and live as brothers and live in peace.'" There is a
+little paragraph as to language. "There are a great many words in the
+English," says the writer, "that the Indians have no word for, so the
+white people who make the Indian books have to make new Indian words.
+So the Indians have to learn the new Indian words. Now we don't know
+much about it, but we believe the Indians can all learn to speak the
+same as the whites." Then there is a column about the school news:
+"Lizzie McRae, a Creek girl, made a very good corn bread the other
+day. We had some of it. It was right good I tell you." "Robert American
+Horse is a steady boy. He works in the blacksmith shop very well, and
+Mr. Harris never has to tell him but once how to do something." "One
+of the teachers had artificial violets on her belt. A Gros Ventre boy
+saw them, but did not know what they were, so he got up from his desk
+and went close to the teacher. He looked at it and then smelt it. When
+he smelt it he said, 'Pooh! rags!'" "Boys, some time ago Captain Pratt
+gave us advice about throwing stones at birds. Some of the boys who
+understand most English did not listen. We want the birds to come and
+stay with us and sing for us, too. Let us remember about this, and
+not let Captain Pratt have to say it again." "Last Sunday some of the
+large girls had a prayer-meeting in the yard at the back of the girls'
+quarters. Nobody told them to do it, but they thought it would be a
+good thing." There is a long letter from Lizzie Walton, a Pawnee girl
+of thirteen years old, describing a trip to Philadelphia, and I believe
+there are very few girls of thirteen years of age in any school who
+could write more amusingly or better. The account of a magic lantern by
+Ada Bent, a Cheyenne girl, closes the number.
+
+Letters from the children who are sent out to the farmers are published
+in this little periodical, and give a very pleasing picture of the
+lives and aptitudes of these Indians. Virginia, of Kiowar, writes from
+a farm, asking one of the teachers to pardon her for not having done so
+before; but "I have not much time," she says, "I am very busy set the
+table and wash dishes make my bed and make pies and cakes and try to
+make bread too, and the other things beside.... Sometime I make fire
+and bring in wood. Mrs. Borton is very kind lady she has two children
+one girl and boy. I love these little children very much." "My dear
+Miss H----, I am not bad a girl. I help now a great deal. I pray for
+you almost every night, also when I wake up in the morning. I like to
+pray very much because I make myself good." And so on in a pleasant
+little gossiping way, frequently in very difficult language. There is
+an article in the 'School News' of July upon the shooting of President
+Garfield: "The man who shot him," says the writer, "we suppose, thought
+he would please some of the people in the United States. He thought he
+was very smart. If President were to die how would every white man,
+black man and the Indian feel? It was not in war when the President
+was shot, for our country don't have war any more, but in peace....
+We all feel sorry because the President is suffering. We hope he
+will soon recover." It is stated that about a hundred boys and girls
+have gone out to work on the farms, and there are some trite remarks
+about the advantages of hard work as opposed to the disadvantages of
+laziness. "The farmers up country say the Indian boys can bind wheat
+first-rate." "Nelly Cook, Sioux, made 36 sheets in one day last week.
+Nellie Cary, Apache, made 32, and Ella Moore, Creek, made 30. Boys, do
+you think those girls are lazy?" The 'School News' has a reporter, it
+would appear, for the paper says that "Our reporter took a walk round
+in the shops to see what the boys were doing. In all the shops every
+boy was busy. In the carpenter shop there were Jock (Arapahoe), Ralph
+(Sioux), Elwood (Iowa), and Joe Gun (Ponca) sawing out window and door
+frames. Oscar (Cheyenne) and Michael Burns (Apache) were busy carving
+balcony posts; and Lester (Arapahoe) was outside chiselling a beam.
+These things are all for our new hospital.... Jesse (Arapahoe) and
+Little Elk (Cheyenne) were busy in the gymnasium. The waggons which
+Robert American Horse has finished painting are to be sent to Oregon
+and Washington Territories." It is sometimes difficult to make out
+the meaning of the little prattle which these small people commit to
+the uncertain medium of the English tongue; but, on the whole, it is
+a most interesting and curious study. In one respect these children
+of the forest possess that which civilisation seems rather to dwarf
+amongst men of the highest culture and imagination--a certain stately
+eloquence and nobility of expression, in which natural images abound,
+and allegory and metaphor consort together in excellent and tasteful
+union. In a paper called 'Eadle Keatah Toh,' which seems to have been
+the precursor of the 'School News,' there is an interesting report
+from the Committee on Indian Affairs to the House of Representatives,
+submitted by Mr. Pound. The motto of the paper is "God helps those
+who help themselves"; but surely it might be better put that God will
+help those who seek to do good to the unfortunate Indians, who in
+contact with civilisation are rendered utterly helpless, and who in
+their attempts to help themselves according to the manner of the race
+must meet with nothing but extinction. From time to time there are
+notices of deaths. One would like to know who wrote the account of the
+"death of John Renville, son of Gabriel Renville, Chief of the Sisseton
+Sioux." After noticing the circumstances under which he contracted his
+fatal illness--fever, produced by drinking water at a spring on a hot
+day on a march to the camp in Perry County, the writer says:--"'Death
+loves a shining mark,' the poet sang long ago; and in the passing away
+of John Renville from our school we sadly say, how truthfully the poet
+sang.... Through all the days of his sickness his large sorrowful eyes
+had a far-away wondering look, no pain marred the beauty of his brow,
+and his voice as he addressed his sister, who tenderly watched over
+him, was like the trumpet warbling of some mournful bird. Our hearts
+follow the father in deep sympathy as he bears back the body of his
+beautiful boy to the land of the Dakotas for burial."
+
+The Indian chiefs have a right, which they often exercise, of visiting
+these schools as a Board; and there is an account in the Carlisle paper
+of the visit of Spotted Tail, Iron Wing, White Thunder, Black Crow,
+and Louis Robideau from the Rosebud Agency; Red Cloud, American Horse,
+Red Dog, Red Shirt, Little Wound, and Two Strike from the Pine Ridge
+Agency; Like the Bear and Medicine Bull from the Lower Brule Agency;
+Son of the Star, Poor Wolf, Peter Beauchamp, and John Smith from Fort
+Berthold; Two Bears, John Big Head, Grass, Thunder Hawk, and Louis
+Primeau from Standing Rock; Charger and Bull Eagle from Cheyenne River;
+Brother to All and James Broadhead from Crow Creek; Strike the Ree
+and Jumping Thunder from Yankton; Robert Hakewashte and Eli Abraham
+from Santee Agency; Mr. Tackett and his wife and daughter; a daughter
+of Spotted Tail, and others. The meeting of the children with their
+parents is described as being most touching; and sometimes the pupils
+were not recognised, so greatly had they altered. As the chiefs seemed
+unwilling to speak when called upon to do so, there was silence for a
+time till a little girl, who had been about a year and a half at the
+school, expressed her desire to speak in so earnest a way that General
+Marshall permitted her to do so; and so, speaking in her own dialect,
+her words were translated into English and into Sioux. She declared
+that she liked the white man's ways and the white man's language.
+Indian words, she said, were down on the ground, but the white man's
+language was in his head. The chiefs, who listened attentively, seemed
+to understand this curious figure of speech, and nodded their approval.
+And then she enlarged upon the advantage of what she learned, and
+implored the chiefs to send their children to the school, where she
+says she is going to try to be God's daughter. Her words seemed to
+kindle the fire within the chieftains' breasts, for Like the Bear, a
+Sioux, and father of one of the boys at Hampton School, came forward
+and addressed the meeting. "There is no greater power in the world,"
+said he, "than the Great Spirit, and we must listen to Him and do
+what He wants us to do. When the men who were sent out by the Great
+Father the President asked for my children I gave them up. I see you
+are making brains for my children, and you are making eyes for them so
+that they can see. That is what I thank the Great Spirit for, and it is
+that which will make me strong." Then Robert Hakewashte, a chief from
+the Santee Agency, spoke, and said that he wanted schools like that
+which he saw here on his own reservation, and Spotted Tail wished for
+the same thing. "Since I have learned the words of God," he says, "it
+makes no difference to me what is the colour of a man's skin; if he
+walks like a man it is the same. I do not believe God likes the white
+colour only. God likes red and white, for He made them all." And then
+the flood of eloquence was loosened, and an old chief of the Sioux,
+nearly blind, verging on ninety years of age, who had come to see his
+grandson, said: "I grew up a red man, and the things I see here I never
+had a chance to see before. I have heard about the white man's church
+and his religion, and I have heard about the holy house. I have looked
+into them, and I am very much pleased. But there is only one Great
+Spirit we all can worship, and the red men all over the country are
+hearing about it. You are teaching the children to worship the Great
+Spirit. That is a great thing, and I like it. But you have here two
+sons of one father. One is sick. I want you to keep the other." And so
+he carried him away.
+
+The condition of the Red Man who is allowed to exist under the banner
+of the Republic is a subject which has attracted the attention of the
+best and wisest men in the United States. The treatment of the Indians
+is a question of future policy. It is one which must exercise a very
+deep and abiding influence on the whole history of an ancient and
+interesting people. But it is exceedingly difficult to put in a short
+compass its most salient points before those who are unacquainted with
+the nature of the problems to be solved. Comparisons are odious, above
+all places, in America, when they are not to the advantage of the Great
+Republic, and I shall not draw any between the state of the Indian
+tribes in Canada and in the States. But it may be fairly admitted that
+the Indian Question in Canada is divested of many of the difficulties
+which surround it south of the lakes. The people of Canada have far
+more land than they know what to do with. They are a sparse population.
+They are not impelled to fierce adventures by mining "booms," and they
+are altogether less progressive than their American brethren. Shall we
+say that they are more charitable, more humane, less greedy of other
+men's goods? I do not say so. But at all events it is perfectly true
+that the Red Man, although he is dying out under the influence of
+whiskey and other influences which need not be particularised, in his
+native land, lives in comparative peace and comfort under the British
+flag in Canada. He is content with the White Mother. He pursues the
+occupations dear to his race as a hunter and as a fisherman. He is a
+dealer in peltries, and in such small barter as his needs require. He
+is the companion of sportsmen, and he delights, free as mountain air,
+to hunt on the hillside and in the prairie in winter over the vast
+ranges of snowy fields which in the few short months of spring and
+summer teem with flowers, and the frosty lakes which yield fish to his
+spear and net. There are few or no railways through his reservations
+to vex his repose, no great trains of miners with pick and rifle to
+drive away the moose and the buffalo, and hand the native hunter over
+to starvation. The Indian gives to the white man all he needs, and aids
+him in obtaining from the wide stretch of land over which he roams all
+the wealth that it can afford. Practically one part of the Dominion
+is handed over to the Red Man and to the half-breeds, for there is an
+Indian frontier which as yet has not been much encroached upon by any
+large migration of whites. As far as I know, conflicts north of the
+Saint Lawrence between Indians and whites are unknown, or have not
+been heard of for very many years. South of the great lakes, in the
+wonderful land over which is displayed the banner of the stars and
+stripes, the fate of the Indian is very different. In the words of Mr.
+Carl Schurz, himself an expert in the question, "the history of the
+relations of the United States with the Red Man presents in great part
+a record of broken treaties, of unjust wars and of cruel spoliation."
+That is a sweeping statement, which it would be just as well for
+an Englishman not to make, but coming from the mouth of an American
+citizen and of a United States Minister with plenty of evidence to back
+it, there can be no harm in recording my conviction of its truth. It is
+but another indictment against a defect in the form of government which
+Americans exalt as the most perfect of human institutions, that the
+central government made treaties in good faith with the Indian tribes,
+but was unable to enforce their obligations or to maintain their
+integrity. There is, as all well-informed people know--well informed,
+at least, in reference to American affairs--a commissioner who makes an
+annual report to the Secretary of the Interior respecting the Indian
+tribes in the various locations over the Union and the Territories.
+The last of these reports which I have seen is that of the Acting
+Commissioner Mr. Marble, addressed to the Department of the Interior
+from the office of Indian Affairs at Washington in the November of
+last year. The volume contains the reports of the agents in the Indian
+Territory; of the schools for Indian children established in pursuance
+of a wise and humane policy, and detailed statistics in relation to the
+Indian settlements and reservations, the latter indeed forming by far
+the largest portion of the volume of 400 pages. Before I call attention
+to the condition of the Indians, and the efforts made to save them from
+extinction or from a degradation worse than annihilation, I should like
+to direct the attention of those who are interested in the subject
+to the view which is beginning to find favour, I believe, among the
+most experienced men in the States, that the system of "Reservations"
+is founded on a mistake the magnitude of which is demonstrated every
+day, and that the only means of saving the Indians from extinction is
+their gradual absorption as educated communities in the agricultural
+life of the nation, keeping them far as may be from the white man,
+but making no other distinction between them and the other citizens
+of the United States than such as must be found in the nature of the
+Indian race and their degree of culture and civilisation--treating
+them, in fact, as communities of Mennonites, Mormons, or Norwegians,
+or other nationalities would be treated in the United States. When
+the Reservations were first established it was considered impossible
+that the migration of the whites would extend to the remote regions of
+the west to which the unfortunate survivors of the people with whose
+virtues and vices Cooper and other novelists have made us familiar were
+gradually and often remorselessly driven. It is a plea which will be
+urged in bar of judgment that the doctrine of States Rights prevented
+the interference of the United States Government on behalf of the
+Indian tribes who were often ruthlessly destroyed. But it will scarcely
+be a plea, I think, which humanity in full court would recognise as
+valid. _Homo homini lupus._ But to the Red Man as to the Black in many
+cases the White Man is worse than any wolf; far more bloodthirsty and
+rapacious than any tiger--a Cain of Cains. It was our own kith and kin
+who, landing on the shores of the North American continent, encroaching
+by degrees upon the tribes and at last encountering their hostility,
+spread their sway literally by fire and sword, and rooted out the
+Red Man wherever they found him established on land or by sea which
+they coveted. We, whose countrymen have worked out the same policy on
+the Australian continent and Van Diemen's Land, and who can only be
+restrained from its pursuit in New Zealand by the strong arm of the
+Home Government, can scarcely afford to take up stones to fling at our
+American brethren; and it is not with any purpose of indictment or
+accusation that I proceed to make a few remarks on the relations of
+the United States Government with the Red Man, and the efforts which
+they have been making to compensate the Indians in some measure for the
+injustice and persecution dealt out for many a generation.
+
+As I looked at the men gathered at some of the railroad stations in
+the western desert and thought of the Red Men whose fate it is to
+meet such representatives of civilisation and Christianity, I could
+not but be filled with pity for the unfortunates and with wonder at
+"the dispensation" under which they live. The faces are fine and bold
+enough, bearded to the cheek or shaved in the American fashion, with
+bold staring eyes, which "look square" in your own, with a general
+expression "Do you want a fight?" in them--the heads to which they
+belong are generally set on muscular bodies. If a gang of these men
+think fit to go on to an Indian reservation--the very name is too often
+a bitter mockery--who is to stop them? If the Indians try to do so and
+one of the white intruders is killed the country-side rings with cries
+of "vengeance for the massacre of our brethren," and all the papers are
+filled with accounts of "Another Indian Outbreak."
+
+"The average frontier-man in the States looks," as Mr. Schurz says,
+"upon the Indian merely as a nuisance in his way. There are many
+whom it would be difficult to convince that it is a crime to kill an
+Indian." I will go further and say that there are many, I believe, who
+would take great pleasure in killing an Indian whenever they could;
+or as one gentleman observed to me, and I believe in his relations
+with white men no more just or honourable man or more humane could be
+found, "I would sooner kill an Indian than I would a skunk." When I
+was in the West, there was a cry raised that the Utes were about to
+wage war, and appeals appeared in the local papers for a military force
+to march against them. Their leaders were accused of arrogance and of
+insolence, and of murderous designs, and the general remark one heard
+was, "The Utes must go." I inquired a little into the matter when I got
+back, and I found that the Utes were strictly and absolutely, in their
+own right, standing upon the titles, which they had derived from the
+United States Government, to the lands from which they were required
+to move. These lands were wanted. Other lands were pointed out to them,
+to which they objected, and then they were informed that they would be
+moved by force, and preparations were made to levy war against these
+unfortunates, if they resisted deportation from the territory which
+had been assigned to them by the Great Father. Had they been Irish
+landlords, they could not have been treated worse; but in the West not
+one word was raised in favour of their claims.
+
+The first point which has to be considered is, that the Indian is
+obnoxious to the very class of men with whom he is by the necessity
+of things most closely brought in contact. The railway has been the
+great persecutor of Red Men. It has driven away the game, it has
+carried in proximity to their reservations all the enterprise charged
+with whiskey, revolver, rifle, and greed, which can be furnished by
+the offscourings of the world. In the Far West the miners in advance
+throng into the valleys, and break the silence of the mountain-ranges
+by the sound of their picks, the cattle-raisers spread out over the
+plains, the ploughman settles down on the fertile land. "What," asks
+the American philanthropist, and his question is echoed all over the
+world by humane and good men, "what is to become of the Indian?" The
+hunting-grounds are gradually being pushed farther west and north
+until they are bounded by the sea, and by the eternal snow. And if by
+any chance it should be found that there is gold or lead, silver or
+iron, or copper, or coal in any abundance, even under these unpromising
+conditions it will be sought. The buffalo is disappearing fast, faster
+than the Indian himself. Deer are becoming scarcer every year. What
+is to be left for the Red Man? Pastoral life and agriculture, say
+the philanthropists. The substitution, however, is not so easy. The
+weakness of the United States Government is the main cause why the
+policy of reservations has failed. Let us take the account of it by a
+United States Minister. "The Government," says Mr. Schurz, "has tried
+to protect the Indians in good faith against encroachments, and has
+failed. It has yielded to the pressure exercised upon it by people in
+immediate contact with the Indians. When a collision between Indians
+and whites once occurred, no matter who was responsible for it, our
+military forces were always found on the side of the white against the
+savage. How was Government to proclaim that white men should for ever
+be excluded from the millions of acres covered by Indian reservations,
+and that the national power would be exerted to do so?" Such an
+idea the American Minister thinks would be utterly preposterous. The
+rough and ready frontier-man would pick quarrels with the Indians;
+the speculators would urge him on. Government could not prevent
+collisions; the conflict once brought on, Government, in spite of its
+good intentions and sense of justice, would find itself employing its
+forces to hunt down the Indian. The old story would be repeated, as it
+will be wherever, says Mr. Schurz, there is a large and valuable Indian
+Reservation surrounded by white settlements, "and unjust, disgraceful
+as it is, that is an inevitable result." Such being the case then,
+the United States Government being powerless to see that right shall
+be done, and it being at once a human and a Christian duty to avert,
+if possible, the extinction of the original possessors of this grand
+continent, let us see what can be done to carry out the object. Fit the
+Indians, it is said, for the habits and occupations of civilised life;
+give them individual possession of land as property, a fee-simple title
+to the fields they cultivate, guarded by an absolute prohibition of
+sale--because it has been found that whenever the Indians are exposed
+to the temptation of artful traders, they will be cajoled out of the
+titles they have to their land--and you will save the remnants from
+utter destruction. I hope it will be so. I could not but feel a glow
+of enthusiasm when I heard the Attorney-General, Mr. MacVeagh, at
+Washington, speaking incidentally one day about some railway matter,
+declare that he would not sanction the making of a line of railway
+through Indian Territory until he was satisfied that the Indians
+actually understood the conditions which had been offered to them by
+the company. "I will," said Mr. MacVeagh, "send down government agents
+there to ascertain that the Indians thoroughly understand what they
+are doing, and that it is of their own free will and consent that the
+railway passes through their territory in exchange for the money and
+goods they receive for the concession." Excellent and just minister!
+But, alas! I believe that ere I left the United States the whole thing
+was done; the railway company had declared that they would, whether
+or no, make their line, and if an Indian touched a hair of the head of
+any white man, the United States Government would not be able to avert
+the Divine wrath of every white man on the border from the whole of
+the tribe. Well may Mr. Schurz say that the thought of exterminating a
+race once the only occupants of the soil, where so many millions of our
+own people have flourished, must be revolting to every American who is
+not devoid of all sentiments of justice and humanity. Extermination or
+civilisation is the alternative offered to the Indian. Now let us see
+how it is proposed to civilise them. According to the returns in the
+Report for 1880, the number of Indians in the United States, exclusive
+of those in Alaska, is 256,127. Of these, 138,642 are described as
+wearing citizen's dress. It will be observed that there is no estimate
+given of the Indians who do not wear citizen's dress under this head.
+Citizens must be sometimes very badly dressed indeed if the Indians I
+saw at various stations along the line to San Francisco in shocking
+bad hats and tattered clothes were to be included amongst those who
+figured under this description in the report of the Commissioner. About
+17,000 houses are reported as occupied. There are 224 schools, attended
+by 6000 scholars for a month or more during the year, scattered over
+the continent. About 34,550 Indians could read. There were 154 church
+buildings and 74 missionaries. The number of children of school age was
+34,541; but this was an under estimate. Of these there was only school
+accommodation for 9972. The total amount expended for education during
+the year by the United States Government was $249,299; by the State of
+New York, $15,863; by the State of Pennsylvania, $325; by other States,
+nothing; by religious societies, $46,933; by tribal funds, $7481.
+22,048 Indian families were engaged in cultivating farms or small
+patches of ground; 33,125 male Indians were labouring in civilised
+pursuits; and 358 Indian apprentices had been pursuing trades during
+the year. This census and these statistics are stated to be imperfect,
+and it would require a close examination of the returns to enable an
+inquirer to form any idea as to the progress made in the direction
+which we are told is the alternative of destruction.
+
+The Reservations of the various Indian tribes are scattered irregularly
+over the United States; from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota on
+the north and north-west, away to the Territories on the other side
+of the Rocky Mountains, down to New Mexico and Arizona, there being
+none in the southern states bordering the Atlantic. But there are
+Red Men of different tribes located, as the Americans would say, in
+the States to the east, such as New York. The Reservations are of
+irregular size and extent. Isabella, in the State of Maine, reserved
+for 848 Indians, lies to the east of 86° longitude, and south of 44°
+latitude. There is a considerable group of Reservations on the western
+shore of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, and in Minnesota. But the proper
+Indian territory lies west of Arkansas, with the Red River on the
+south, New Mexico on the west, and Kansas on the north; and in it are
+concentrated the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chicasaws, Comanches, Cheyennes,
+and several other tribes. The Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and
+Arizona ranks perhaps next in size, extending northwards into Colorado,
+where the Utes have got a large tract of land assigned to them upon
+what appears now to be very doubtful or vanishing tenure. These, and
+numerous reservations, which it would be tedious to enumerate, are
+under the charge of agents appointed by the Government at Washington,
+as to whose functions and personal character and attainments one
+hears very surprising and contradictory reports. But I confess, from
+a perusal of the documents which they have furnished to the head of
+the Department, and which are published in the Annual Report, there
+seems to me no just ground for imputing to these gentlemen want of
+zeal, knowledge, interest, or intelligence. Those who detest the whole
+work of saving the Red Man are very apt to impute to the Indian agents
+not only corrupt practices in relation to the sale of government
+stores and supplies destined for the use of those under their charge,
+but illicit traffic in spirits, which is ruinous to the Red Man, and
+even some participation in the acts of violence which have frequently
+led to Indian troubles. It all depends upon the manner in which your
+informant in the States regards the Indian Question whether the agents
+are described as scoundrels whom no man could trust, or as gentlemen of
+high propriety and general excellence.
+
+The necessities which have been imposed by advancing civilisation
+of providing Indians with food entail a heavy outlay upon the United
+States Government, which is much begrudged by large sections of members
+of Congress, although they do not see their way clearly to withhold
+supplies of food from the unfortunate people whose hunting-grounds have
+been occupied, and who have not yet learned the arts of agriculture,
+so as to be able to supply themselves with food. The transportation of
+stores, the cost of beef, corn, coffee, bread, tobacco, tea; in fact,
+all kinds of food, woollen goods, clothing, boots, hats, groceries,
+waggons, tools, hardware, and medical supplies,--all these duly figure
+in the estimates of the Indian Commissioner to a very considerable
+amount, and the returns as yet do not present any large reduction on
+the annual charge; although nearly all the agents speak in terms of
+great hopefulness of the extraordinary advance which has been made in
+their agencies in the cultivation of the soil.
+
+One remarkable division of the agencies has reference to their
+appropriation to religious denominations. An Indian might well
+be puzzled as to his form of belief if he were passed through the
+various agencies, attending at each a religious service or two, and
+listening to the teaching of the various divines attached to them. The
+Society of Friends have control of the belief and religious teaching
+of the Sante and Nemaja Indians in Nebraska, and of the Pawnees in
+the Indian Territory; to the Methodists are assigned three tribes in
+California, three tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, three
+in Montana, two in Idaho, and one in Michigan. The Nevada Cherokees,
+Creeks, Choctaws, Chicasaws, and Seminoles are handed over to the
+Baptists. The Presbyterians have charge of the Nezpercès in Idaho,
+Umtas in Utah; the Apaches, Pueblos, and two other tribes in New
+Mexico. The Congregational Church exercises its religious offices
+among the tribes in Wisconsin, among two tribes in Dacotah, and one
+in Washington Territory. The Reformed Church has its work cut out for
+it in Arizona amongst four tribes. The Protestant Episcopal Church
+exercises its jurisdiction over one tribe in Minnesota, six tribes in
+Dacotah, one in Indian Territory, and one in Wyoming. The Unitarians
+have apparently only one tribe in teaching, the Los Pinos in Colorado.
+The United Presbyterians have one tribe in Oregon; the Christian Union
+has another in Oregon; the Evangelical Lutheran has charge of the
+Southern Utes in Colorado; and lastly, the Roman Catholic Church has
+two tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, one in Montana,
+and two in Dacotah. As a general rule, the reports of the missionaries
+themselves are more sanguine, as they are wont to be, than are those
+of disinterested, perhaps unprejudiced, observers of their work. But,
+as is natural, the actual progress made depends very much, not only
+upon the nature of the tribe among whom the work is carried on, but
+on the character of the missionary, and on his ability and energy. In
+some instances, I see the condition of a tribe is reported as being
+lamentable, from a religious point of view, whilst in a neighbouring
+reservation, it is stated that great progress has been made in the
+establishment of religious teaching and ideas. The Rosebud Agency is
+said to prosper in the hands of one reverend gentlemen; the fathers of
+St. Ignatius are described as doing good work amongst the Flatheads;
+the Pawnees are left without any missionaries at all, and, says
+the government report, "are probably better off without them." And
+depreciatory remarks are slightingly introduced concerning the work at
+other agencies. On the Devil's Lake Agency, the majority of the adults
+shun the missionaries as they would the gentleman who may be supposed
+to own the lake by the sides of which they are encamped. The Jesuit
+fathers and the Catholic sisters are described as working generally
+with zeal and success, whilst one agency assigned to the Methodists
+is said to have no religious agency at all. It is to the success of
+the attempts made to educate the Indians at the public establishments
+that the philanthropist and humanitarian must look with the most
+hopefulness.
+
+All the reports of the teachers and visitors of these schools coincide
+in one point, that the young Indian is most teachable, and that in
+respect of acquiring knowledge he is, if anything, the superior of the
+white, who seems to enjoy no hereditary excellence in his capacity for
+acquiring knowledge. The Bill to which the Report was an introduction
+may be considered indeed as the Magna Charta of the Indian tribes
+if it be followed up by judicious treatment, and careful management
+of and consideration for the rights conferred upon these tribes as
+preliminary to their absorption as citizens in the mass of the nation,
+when they are fit for such an amalgamation with the white races. The
+advance of the United States westwards has left vacant many military
+posts and barracks, stranded, as it were, high and dry in the midst of
+the torrent of civilisation. Fort Bridger, Wyoming; Carlisle Barracks,
+Pennsylvania; Fort Craig, New Mexico; Fort Cummings, in the same
+territory, and a number of others, have been named as suitable for
+the purpose of educating the Indian children; and it was in pursuance
+of the measure recommended to Congress that the various agencies
+throughout the Indian Territories were directed to forward children
+whom their parents might wish to entrust to the officers of the United
+States for education. "Received in the rudest state of savagism," says
+the Report, "their progress is already most remarkable." I have already
+remarked that the health of the boys is not generally satisfactory.
+Their sanitary condition is bad; and it would appear that sometimes in
+these long and tedious journeyings from the remote Indian agencies the
+poor children suffer much.
+
+Even at the present moment the Anglo-Saxon appears to be dealing with
+the Maori in New Zealand very much as he has dealt with the native in
+Tasmania and in Australia. The history of our relations with the New
+Zealand chiefs and people is not in a nature to enable us to throw
+stones at the Americans with impunity, for the glass house in which
+we live can very easily be reached. Some sixteen or seventeen years
+ago a rebellion, arising out of the aggressions of the white settlers
+on the lands of the Maori, was averted by a Proclamation and by Acts
+confiscating a large tract of Tallinassey, which became theoretically
+the property of the Crown. Of course the natives had as little to say
+to that as the lady who is mentioned in 'Tristram Shandy' had with the
+declaration that "she was not related to her own child." But they did
+not recognise the occupancy, and whenever a white man settled upon
+a portion of the ground they pulled down his fences and removed his
+landmarks. The contest is still going on, but no one who is acquainted
+with the history of the colony will doubt what the end will be; and
+it is coming soon, or it is to come, the moment the colonists are bent
+upon taking the land, and when it is desired to do so.
+
+"It but feebly expresses the judgment formed from what we have observed
+to say that we regard the experiment made in this school to educate and
+improve Indian children as in every way a very remarkable success." _Si
+sic omnes!_ Why does not the United States Government, or if not the
+Government, the people, abounding in wealth, full of pious impulses,
+humane, charitable, who justly say that the worst use you can make
+of an Indian is to hang him; why do not the political economists who
+declare that it costs a million of dollars to get rid of an Indian with
+gunpowder and lead; why do not the enterprising and wealthy capitalists
+who desire to appropriate Indian Reservations all combine to extend the
+work of these schools so as to absorb all that remains of the Red Man
+in the rising generation amongst the citizens of the great Republic? A
+blessed work, worthy of an imperial State, truly great and truly good!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+LONDON:
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+
+The King and the Commons. A Selection of Cavalier and Puritan Songs.
+Edited by Professor Morley.
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+Words of Wellington: Maxims and Opinions of the Great Duke.
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+Dr. Johnson's Rasselas, Prince of Abyssinia. With Notes.
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+The Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia, and the Letter to a Friend. By Sir
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+Coleridge's Christabel, and other Imaginative Poems. With Preface by
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+Lord Chesterfield's Letters, Sentences, and Maxims. With Introduction
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+Essays in Mosaic. By Thos. Ballantyne.
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+My Uncle Toby; his Story and his Friends. Edited by P. Fitzgerald.
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+Reflections; or, Moral Sentences and Maxims of the Duke de la
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+in the New World," "The Two Friends," "Involuntary Voyage."
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+_Bickersteth's Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer_ may be had
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+_Bickersteth (Rev. E. H., M.A.) The Reef, and other Parables._ 1 vol.,
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+
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+_Bickersteth (Rev. E. H., M.A.) The Shadow of the Rock._ A Selection of
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+_Biographies of the Great Artists (Illustrated)._ Each of the following
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+
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+---- _Akim-foo: the History of a Failure._ Demy 8vo, cloth, 2nd
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+
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+
+_Changed Cross (The)_, and other Religious Poems. 16mo, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Child of the Cavern (The); or, Strange Doings Underground._ By JULES
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+.
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+
+_Cradle-Land of Arts and Creeds; or, Nothing New under the Sun._
+CHARLES J. STONE, Barrister-at-law, and late Advocate, High Courts,
+Bombay. 8vo, pp. 420, cloth, 14_s._
+
+_Cripps the Carrier._ 3rd Edition, 6_s._ See BLACKMORE.
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+_Dana (R. H.) Two Years before the Mast and Twenty-Four years After._
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+edges, 5_s._
+
+_Dictionary (General) of Archæology and Antiquities._ From the French
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+
+_Dogs of Assize._ A Legal Sketch-Book in Black and White. Containing 6
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+
+
+_Eight Cousins_. _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_Eighteenth Century Studies._ Essays by F. HITCHMAN. Demy 8vo, 18_s._
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+_Elementary Education in Saxony._ J. L. BASHFORD, M.A., Trin. Coll.,
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+_English Philosophers._ Edited by IWAN MULLER, M.A., New College,
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+
+The following are in the press:---
+
+=Bacon.= Professor FOWLER, Professor of Logic in Oxford.
+
+=Berkeley.= Professor T. H. GREEN, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
+Oxford.
+
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+[Ready.
+
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+
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+
+=Adam Smith.= J. A. FARRER, M.A., Author of "Primitive Manners and
+Customs." [Ready.
+
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+
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+
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+
+=Hartley.= E. S. BOWEN, B.A., late Scholar of New College, Oxford.
+
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+
+=Shaftesbury.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+=Hutcheson.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+Arrangements are in progress for volumes on LOCKE, HUME, PALEY, REID,
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+
+_Episodes of French History._ Edited, with Notes, Genealogical,
+Historical, and other Tables, by GUSTAVE MASSON, B.A.
+
+ =1. Charlemagne and the Carlovingians.=
+ =2. Louis XI. and the Crusades.=
+ =3. Francis I. and Charles V.=
+ =4. Francis I. and the Renaissance.=
+
+The above Series is based upon M. Guizot's "History of France." Each
+volume is choicely Illustrated, with Maps, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Erema; or, My Father's Sin._ _See_ BLACKMORE.
+
+_Etcher (The)._ Containing 36 Examples of the Original Etched work of
+Celebrated Artists, amongst others: BIRKET FOSTER, J. E. HODGSON, R.A.,
+COLIN HUNTER, J. P. HESELTINE, ROBERT W. MACBETH, R. S. CHATTOCK, H. R.
+ROBERTSON, &c., &c. Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 12_s._
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+
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+_Evans (C.) Over the Hills and Far Away._ C. EVANS. One Volume, crown
+8vo, cloth extra, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _A Strange Friendship._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
+
+_Eve of Saint Agnes (The)._ JOHN KEATS. Illustrated with Nineteen
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+
+_Fern World (The)._ F. G. HEATH. Illustrated by Twelve Coloured Plates,
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+
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+
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+
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+_Foreign Countries and the British Colonies._ Edited by F. S. PULLING,
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+The following is a List of the Volumes:--
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+
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+Saviour, Author of "New Greece."
+
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+Editor of _The Alpine Journal_.
+
+=Austria.= By D. KAY, F.R.G.S.
+
+=Russia.= By W. R. MORFILL, M.A., Oriel College, Oxford, Lecturer on
+the Ilchester Foundation, &c.
+
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+"Telegraph and Travel," &c.
+
+=Japan.= By S. MOSSMAN, Author of "New Japan," &c.
+
+=Peru.= By CLEMENTS H. MARKHAM, M.A., C.B.
+
+=Canada.= By W. FRASER RAE, Author of "Westward by Rail," &c.
+
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+John's College, Oxford.
+
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+
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+
+=France.= By Miss M. ROBERTS, Author of "The Atelier du Lys," "Mdlle.
+Mori," &c.
+
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+&c.
+
+=Spain.= By the Rev. WENTWORTH WEBSTER, M.A., Chaplain at St. Jean de
+Luz.
+
+=Turkey-in-Asia.= By J. C. MCCOAN, M.P.
+
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+
+=Holland.= By R. L. POOLE.
+
+_Franc (Maude Jeane)._ The following form one Series, small post 8vo,
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+ ---- _Emily's Choice._ 5_s._
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+
+_Froissart (The Boy's)._ Selected from the Chronicles of England,
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+
+
+_Games of patience._ _See_ CADOGAN.
+
+_Gentle Life_ (Queen Edition). 2 vols, in 1, small 4to, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES.
+
+Price 6_s._ each; or in calf extra, price 10_s._ 6_d._; Smaller
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+
+A Reprint (with the exception of "Familiar Words" and "Other People's
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+
+_The Gentle Life._ Essays in aid of the Formation of Character of
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+
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+
+_About in the World._ Essays by Author of "The Gentle Life."
+
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+
+_Like unto Christ._ A New Translation of Thomas à Kempis' "De
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+
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+
+_Familiar Words._ An Index Verborum, or Quotation Handbook. Affording
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+Edited with Notes by Author of "The Gentle Life." 7_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
+_The Gentle Life._ 2nd Series, 8th Edition.
+
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+
+_The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected._ the Author of "The
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+
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+
+_Half-Length Portraits._ Short Studies of Notable Persons. By J. HAIN
+FRISWELL.
+
+_Essays on English Writers_, for the Self-improvement of Students in
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+
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+
+_Other People's Windows._ J. HAIN FRISWELL. 3rd Edition.
+
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+of human nature, so full of illustrative anecdotes, that the reader
+cannot fail to be amused."--_Morning Post._
+
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+
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+
+_Gouffé. The Royal Cookery Book._ JULES GOUFFÉ; translated and adapted
+for English use by ALPHONSE GOUFFÉ, Head Pastrycook to her Majesty the
+Queen. Illustrated with large plates printed in colours. 161 Woodcuts,
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+---- Domestic Edition, half-bound, 10_s._ 6_d._
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+_Great Historic Galleries of England (The)._ Edited by LORD RONALD
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+ =5. Rossini=, and the Modern Italian School. By H. SUTHERLAND
+ EDWARDS.
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+
+Dr. Hiller and other distinguished writers, both English and Foreign,
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+
+---- ---- _Masson's School Edition._ The History of France from the
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+_Guizot's History of England._ In 3 vols. of about 500 pp. each,
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+_Guyon (Mde.) Life._ UPHAM. 6th Edition, crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
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+_Handbook to the Charities of London._ _See_ Low's.
+
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+
+_Heart of Africa._ Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+_History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power._ With several
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+
+_How I Crossed Africa: from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, Through
+Unknown Countries; Discovery of the Great Zambesi Affluents, &c._--Vol.
+I., The King's Rifle. Vol. II., The Coillard Family. By Major SERPA
+PINTO. With 24 full-page and 118 half-page and smaller Illustrations,
+13 small Maps, and 1 large one. 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42_s._
+
+_How to Live Long._ _See_ HALL.
+
+_How to get Strong and how to Stay so._ WILLIAM BLAIKIE. A Manual of
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+small post 8vo, 5_s._
+
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+
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+
+---- _See_ "History of a Crime."
+
+_Hundred Greatest Men (The)._ 8 portfolios, 21_s._ each, or 4 vols.,
+half morocco, gilt edges, 12 guineas, containing 15 to 20 Portraits
+each. See below.
+
+"Messrs. SAMPSON LOW & CO. are about to issue an important
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+The Introductions to the volumes are to be written by recognized
+authorities on the different subjects, the English contributors being
+DEAN STANLEY, Mr. MATTHEW ARNOLD, Mr. FROUDE, and Professor MAX MÜLLER;
+in Germany, Professor HELMHOLTZ; in France, MM. TAINE and RENAN; and in
+America, Mr. EMERSON. The Portraits are to be Reproductions from fine
+and rare Steel Engravings."--_Academy._
+
+_Hygiene and Public Health (A Treatise on)._ Edited by A. H. BUCK, M.D.
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+one guinea each.
+
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+
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+
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+6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
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+Barrister-at-Law. Crown 8vo, 12_s._ Second Edition.
+
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+
+
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+of Kilfinnan," "Dick Cheveley." Each vol., with very numerous
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+binding, plain edges, 5_s._
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+
+_Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart._ 6_s._ _See_ BLACK.
+
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+1036, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21_s._
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+
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+
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+
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+8vo, cloth, 1_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
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+ =7. Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.= By MAJOR W. F.
+ BUTLER, C.B.
+ =8. Ocean to Ocean.= By the Rev. GEORGE M. GRANT. With
+ Illustrations.
+ =9. Cruise of the Challenger.= By W. J. J. SPRY, R.N.
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+ =In Silk Attire.= By W. BLACK.
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+ =History of a Crime=: The Story of the Coup d'Etat. By VICTOR
+ HUGO.
+ =Alice Lorraine.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Lorna Doone.= By R. D. BLACKMORE. 8th Edition.
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+ =Clara Vaughan.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Cripps the Carrier.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
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+ Illustrations. _See also_ Rose Library.
+ =The Afghan Knife.= By R. A. STERNDALE, Author of "Seonee."
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+ =Ninety-Three.= By VICTOR HUGO. Numerous Illustrations.
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+ STOWE.
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+RÉMUSAT, Senator. Translated by Mrs. CASHEL HOEY and Mr. JOHN LILLIE.
+4th Edition, cloth extra. This work was written by Madame de Rémusat
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+_New Novels._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._ per vol.:--
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+ =Fancy Free.= By C. GIBBON. 3 vols.
+ =The Stillwater Tragedy.= By J. B. ALDRICH.
+ =Prince Fortune and Prince Fatal.= By Mrs. CARRINGTON,
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+ =An English Squire.= By C. B. COLERIDGE, Author of "Lady
+ Betty," "Hanbury Wills," &c. 3 vols.
+ =Christowell.= By R. D. BLACKMORE. 3 vols.
+ =Mr. Caroli.= By Miss SEGUIN. 3 vols.
+ =David Broome, Artist.= By Miss O'REILLY. 3 vols.
+ =Braes of Yarrow.= By CHAS. GIBBON. 3 vols.
+
+_Nice and Her Neighbours._ the Rev. CANON HOLE, Author of "A Book about
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+
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+
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+eminent Artists. Folio, in coloured boards, 6_s._
+
+
+_Oberammergau Passion Play._ _See_ "Art in the Mountains."
+
+_O'Brien._ _See_ "Parliamentary History" and "Irish Land Question."
+
+_Old-Fashioned Girl._ _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_On Horseback through Asia Minor._ Capt. FRED BURNABY, Royal Horse
+Guards, Author of "A Ride to Khiva." 2 vols., 8vo, with three Maps and
+Portrait of Author, 6th Edition, 38_s._; Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Our Little Ones in Heaven._ Edited by the Rev. H. ROBBINS. With
+Frontispiece after Sir JOSHUA REYNOLDS. Fcap., cloth extra, New
+Edition--the 3rd, with Illustrations, 5_s._
+
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+
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+
+
+_Painters of All Schools._ LOUIS VIARDOT, and other Writers. 500
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+
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+SHEPHERD. Post 8vo, cloth, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Palliser (Mrs.) A History of Lace, from the Earliest Period._ A New
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+
+---- _Historic Devices, Badges, and War Cries._ 8vo, 1_l._ 1_s._
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+
+_Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question (The)._ From 1829
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+
+The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P., in a Letter to the Author,
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+
+_Pathways of Palestine: a Descriptive Tour through the Holy Land._
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+
+_Primitive Folk Moots; or, Open-Air Assemblies in Britain._ By GEORGE
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+
+_Silent Hour (The)._ _See_ "Gentle Life Series."
+
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+
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+
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+SMITH. Illustrated by Photographs and Woodcuts. Demy 8vo, 6th Edition,
+18_s._
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+_Student's French Examiner._ F. JULIEN, Author of "Petites Leçons de
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+
+_Studies in German Literature._ BAYARD TAYLOR. Edited by MARIE TAYLOR.
+With an Introduction by the Hon. GEORGE H. BOKER. 8vo, cloth extra,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Studies in the Theory of Descent._ Dr. AUG. WEISMANN, Professor in
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+_Through America; or, Nine Months in the United States._ W. G.
+MARSHALL, M.A. With nearly 100 Woodcuts of Views of Utah country and
+the famous Yosemite Valley; The Giant Trees, New York, Niagara, San
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+the Author during his visits to Salt Lake City in 1878 and 1879. In 1
+vol., demy 8vo, 21_s._
+
+_Through the Dark Continent: The Sources of the Nile; Around the
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+containing 150 Full-page and other Illustrations, 2 Portraits of the
+Author, and 10 Maps, 42_s._ Seventh Thousand. Cheaper Edition, crown
+8vo, with some of the Illustrations and Maps. 1 vol., 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Tour of the Prince of Wales in India._ _See_ RUSSELL.
+
+_Trees and Ferns_. By F. G. HEATH. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, with
+numerous Illustrations, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
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+numerous Illustrations, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, 5_s._
+
+_Two Supercargoes (The); or, Adventures in Savage Africa._ By W. H. G.
+KINGSTON. Numerous Full-page Illustrations. Square imperial 16mo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, 5_s._
+
+
+_Under the Punkah._ PHIL ROBINSON, Author of "In my Indian Garden."
+Crown 8vo, limp cloth, uniform with the above, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Up and Down; or, Fifty Years' Experiences in Australia, California,
+New Zealand, India, China, and the South Pacific._ Being the Life
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+
+
+BOOKS BY JULES VERNE.
+
+------------------------+--------------------++---------------------------
+LARGE CROWN 8vo |{Containing 350 to || Containing the whole
+ |{600 pp. and from || of the text with some
+ |{50 to 100 full-page|| illustrations
+ |{illustrations. ||
+------------------------+---------+----------++---------------+-----------
+ | In very | In || In cloth |
+ | handsome| plainer || binding, gilt | Coloured
+WORKS. | cloth | binding, || edges, | Boards.
+ | binding | plain || smaller |
+ | gilt | edges. || type. |
+ | edges. | || |
+------------------------+---------+----------++---------------+-----------
+ |_s._ _d._| _s._ _d._|| _s._ _d._ |
+Twenty Thousand Leagues |} | || |
+ under the Sea. Part I.|} 10 6 | 5 0 || 3 6 | 2 vols.,
+ Ditto. Part II. |} | || |1_s._ each.
+ | | || |
+Hector Servadac | 10 6 | 5 0 || |
+ | | || |
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+From the Earth to the |} | || |
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+ | | || |
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+ | | || |
+Around the World in |} 7 6 | 3 6 || 2 0 | 1 0
+ Eighty Days |} | || |
+ | | || |
+A Floating City |} | ||{ 2 0 | 1 0
+ |} 7 6 | 3 6 ||{ |
+The Blockade Runners |} | ||{ 2 0 | 1 0
+ | | || |
+Dr. Ox's Experiment |} | ||} |
+ |} | ||} |
+Master Zacharius |} 7 6 | 3 6 ||} 2 0 | 1 0
+ |} | ||} |
+A Drama in the Air |} | || | 1 0
+ |} | || |
+A Winter amid the Ice |} | || 2 0 | 1 0
+ | | || |
+The Survivors of the |} | ||{ |
+"Chancellor" |} 7 6 | 3 6 ||{ 2 0 | 2 vols.
+ |} | ||{ | 1_s._ each.
+ | | || |
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+ | | || |
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+ | | || |
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+ | | || |
+The Tribulations of a |} 7 6 | || |
+ Chinaman |} | || |
+ | | || |
+THE STEAM HOUSE, | | || |
+ 2 vols.:-- | | || |
+Vol. I. The Demon of | 7 6 | || |
+ Cawnpore | | || |
+Vol. II. Tigers and | | || |
+ Traitors | 7 6 | || |
+------------------------+---------+----------++---------------+-----------
+
+CELEBRATED TRAVELS AND TRAVELLERS. 3 vols. Demy 8vo, 600 pp., upwards
+of 100 full-page illustrations, 12_s._ 6_d._; gilt edges, 14_s._
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+(1) THE EXPLORATION OF THE WORLD.
+
+(2) THE GREAT NAVIGATORS OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY.
+
+(3) THE GREAT EXPLORERS OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY.
+
+
+_Waller (Rev. C. H.) The Names on the Gates of Pearl, and other
+Studies._ the Rev. C. H. WALLER, M.A. Second Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, 6_s._
+
+---- _A Grammar and Analytical Vocabulary of the Words in the Greek
+Testament._ Compiled from Brüder's Concordance. For the use of Divinity
+Students and Greek Testament Classes. By the Rev. C. H. WALLER, M.A.
+Part I., The Grammar. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._ Part II. The
+Vocabulary, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _Adoption and the Covenant. Some Thoughts on Confirmation._
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+_Warner (C. D.) My Summer in a Garden._ Rose Library, 1_s._
+
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+
+---- _In the Wilderness._ Rose Library, 1_s._
+
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+
+_Weaving._ _See_ "History and Principles."
+
+_Wills, A Few Hints on Proving, without Professional Assistance._ By
+a PROBATE COURT OFFICIAL. 5th Edition, revised with Forms of Wills,
+Residuary Accounts, &c. Fcap. 8vo, cloth limp, 1_s._
+
+_With Axe and Rifle on the Western Prairies._ W. H. G. KINGSTON. With
+numerous Illustrations, square crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, 5_s._
+
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+of the Great Duke, gathered from his Despatches, Letters, and Speeches_
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+
+_Wreck of the Grosvenor._ W. CLARK RUSSELL, Author of "John Holdsworth,
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+Edition.
+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+ [A] How Mr. Garrett executed his mission and killed the Kid is
+ narrated in the account of the desperados of the West, which
+ forms a separate chapter.
+
+ [B] The day of our departure from the United States, after the
+ visit of which I have been giving the details, was the date
+ of a great crime, of which we were then ignorant. About the
+ very time that we were on our way to the wharf to embark on
+ board the "_City of Berlin_," the murderer of the President
+ was accomplishing his purpose. But with all the means and
+ appliances which exist for the despatch of news, I believe
+ that the commission of the crime was not known till the
+ steamer had passed out to sea from the Sand Heads.
+
+ [C] _See also_ Rose Library.
+
+
+
+
+London:
+
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+
+CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol.
+II (of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II
+(of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II (of 2)
+ A Record of a Ramble in the United States and Canada in
+ the Spring and Summer of 1881
+
+Author: W. H. Russell
+
+Release Date: December 1, 2013 [EBook #44333]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: UTF-8
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Melissa McDaniel and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="tnbox">
+<p class="center"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b></p>
+<p>Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+Inconsistent spelling and hyphenation in the original
+document have been preserved.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#Fritz">page 26</a> Count Fritz Thumb should possibly be Count FritzThumb.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#Indianopolis">page 120</a>, Indianopolis should possibly be Indianapolis.</p>
+
+<p>On <a href="#How">page 124</a>, General How should possibly be General Howe.</p>
+</div>
+
+<h1>
+HESPEROTHEN;<br />
+<br />
+<span class="s08">NOTES FROM THE WEST:</span><br />
+<br />
+
+<span class="s04">A RECORD OF A</span><br /><br />
+
+<span class="s05">RAMBLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA</span><br />
+<span class="s05">IN THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1881.</span></h1>
+
+<p class="center p4"><span class="s08">BY</span><br />
+
+W. H. RUSSELL, LL.D.<br />
+
+<span class="s05">BARRISTER-AT-LAW.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center p2"><i>IN TWO VOLUMES.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="smcap">Vol. II.</span></p>
+
+<p class="center p4">LONDON:<br />
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON,<br />
+<span class="s08">CROWN BUILDINGS, 188 FLEET STREET.</span><br />
+1882.</p>
+
+<p class="center s05">[<i>All rights reserved.</i>]</p>
+
+<p class="center p6 s08">
+LONDON:<br />
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,<br />
+STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.</p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iii" id="Page_iii">iii</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CONTENTS OF VOL. II.</h2>
+<hr class="l05" />
+<table summary="Table of Contents">
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER I.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">ARIZONA.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Deming&mdash;The Mirage&mdash;Ruined Cities&mdash;American Explorers&mdash;Self-Tormentors&mdash;Animals
+and Plants&mdash;Yuma&mdash;California&mdash;Los
+Angeles&mdash;Santa Monica&mdash;The Pacific</td>
+<td class="tdr">Page <a href="#Page_1">1</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER II.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">A new Land of Goshen&mdash;A Jehu indeed&mdash;The Drive to Clarke's&mdash;A
+Mountain Hostelry&mdash;Grizzlies&mdash;Fascination Point&mdash;The
+Merced&mdash;Yosemite Fall&mdash;A Salute&mdash;Mountain Airs&mdash;The Mirror
+Lake&mdash;"See that Rattle?"&mdash;A Philosophic Barber</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_19">19</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER III.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">SAN FRANCISCO.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">The Palace Hotel&mdash;General McDowell&mdash;Palo-Alto&mdash;The "Hoodlums"&mdash;The
+real Sir Roger&mdash;Exiles in the Far West&mdash;The
+Chinese Population&mdash;For and Against them&mdash;The Sand Lot&mdash;Fast
+Trotters&mdash;The Sea-Lions&mdash;The Diamond Palace&mdash;The
+Coloured Population&mdash;"Eastward Ho!"</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_44">44</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER IV.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Los Angeles&mdash;Mud-geysers&mdash;"Billy the Kid"&mdash;General Fremont&mdash;Manitou,
+the Garden of the Gods&mdash;Desperadoes&mdash;Bob Ingersoll&mdash;Denver
+City&mdash;Leadville&mdash;Grand Cañon</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_73">73</a>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_iv" id="Page_iv">iv</a></span></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER V.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Liquor Law&mdash;Kansas Academy of Science&mdash;An Incident of Travel&mdash;A
+Parting Symposium&mdash;Life in the Cars&mdash;St. Louis to New
+York</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_107">107</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER VI.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">NEW YORK&mdash;NEWPORT&mdash;DEPARTURE.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Coney Island&mdash;Newport&mdash;Bass-fishing&mdash;Habit of Spitting&mdash;Brighton
+Beach&mdash;Newport Coaching&mdash;Extra Ecclesiam&mdash;Victories
+of American Horses&mdash;Newport Avenues&mdash;Return to
+New York&mdash;Our Last Day in America</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_122">122</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER VII.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">RETURN TO EUROPE.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">The "<i>City of Berlin</i>"&mdash;The Inman Line&mdash;The Service at Roche's
+Point&mdash;Queenstown Discomforts&mdash;A sorry Welcome Home</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_140">140</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER VIII.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Education&mdash;Free Schools&mdash;Influence of Money in Politics&mdash;Corruption
+in Public Life&mdash;Crime on the Western Borders&mdash;The
+Great Rebellion&mdash;Anniversaries&mdash;Great Courtesy to Strangers&mdash;Manners
+and Customs</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_151">151</a></td>
+
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">CHAPTER IX.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td colspan="2" class="tdc">THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="cs">Captain Pratt&mdash;Carlisle Barracks&mdash;An Indian Bowman&mdash;The
+Indian Question&mdash;The Pupils' Gossip&mdash;The "School News"&mdash;Indian
+Visitors&mdash;The White Mother&mdash;The India Office&mdash;White
+and Red&mdash;Quo Quousque?&mdash;Indian Title Deeds&mdash;The Reservations&mdash;The
+Indian Agencies&mdash;Missionary Efforts&mdash;The Red
+Man and the Maori</td>
+<td class="tdr"><a href="#Page_186">186</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_1" id="Page_1">1</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center b20 p6">HESPEROTHEN.</p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER I.<br />
+
+ARIZONA.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Deming&mdash;The Mirage&mdash;Ruined Cities&mdash;American Explorers&mdash;Self-Tormentors&mdash;Animals
+and Plants&mdash;Yuma&mdash;California&mdash;Los
+Angeles&mdash;Santa Monica&mdash;The Pacific.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>May 30th.</i>&mdash;At an hour as to which controversy
+might arise, owing to the changes of time to which we
+have been subjected, the train, which had pulled up but
+seldom during the night, stopped at Deming Junction,
+where the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad
+"connects" with the Southern Pacific, on which our
+cars were to be "hauled" to San Francisco. Jefferson
+time and San Francisco time differ two hours, so at one
+end of the station we scored 6 <span class="s08">A.M.</span>, and at the other
+8 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> The sooner one gets away from Deming in any
+direction the better. A year ago&mdash;as is usually the
+case hereabouts&mdash;there was not a trace of a town on
+the dry ugly plain covered with prickly acacias and
+"Spanish bayonets"; now Deming flourishes in gaming
+and drinking saloons, express offices, and all the horrors
+of "enterprise" in the West. The look-out revealed
+a few tents, wooden shanties, a station, at which workmen
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_2" id="Page_2">2</a></span>
+were running up a frame-house, ground littered
+with preserved provision tins, broken crockery, adobes
+and refuse of all sorts. At the door of one hut,
+swarming with flies, swung half a carcase of beef; two
+women were washing, pale-faced, but not uncheerful
+creatures, who had not a good opinion of Deming and
+its population. "They carry out a dead man a day, or
+used to," said one informant. The lady washerwomen
+did not quite corroborate the figure; but, remarked the
+chattier of the two, "there was a considerable shewtin'
+about last night!" To the observation of one of the
+party that he was "going to have a look about," the
+other lady made reply, "I guess if you dew it will be
+'hands up' for ten cents with you." On the platform
+was a United States marshal, with a revolver stuck in
+his belt, but his duties were considered to be punitive
+rather than preventive. Here Mr. Chase and Mr.
+Hawley left us to return to Topeka. At the abschiednehmen
+Sir H. Green was affected by a proof of
+interest in his welfare of a touching character and
+very full of local colour; one of our friends beckoned
+to him, took him aside, and pulling out a revolver
+("It is hands up!" thought Sir Henry), fully loaded,
+pressed it on his acceptance in the kindest manner as a
+useful <i>compagnon de voyage</i>. As we were not to stay
+at Deming, the self-sacrifice was not consummated.</p>
+
+<p>The regular train having come up, our special was
+tacked on to it, and in an hour the locomotive puffed
+out of the depot, and sped westerly on its way at the
+rate of twenty miles an hour, across a plain some
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_3" id="Page_3">3</a></span>
+fifteen miles broad, bordered by jagged, irregular
+mountain ranges north and south, as dry as a bone&mdash;so
+dry that water for the engine has to be brought
+to the stations in tanks. A scanty growth of what
+looked like camel grass, interspersed euphorbias and
+cactuses of great height, was all that met the eye.
+We are approaching the great basin of Arizona, and
+are warned that much dust and great heat must be
+expected, and that the "scenery" does not improve in
+point of variety or verdure, both of which are nearly at
+zero. A vigorous, well-directed campaign against the
+flies in the saloon gave us comparative repose; then the
+blinds being pulled down, and the thermometer reduced
+to 83 deg., society settled itself to study, with results
+indicated presently by a gentle <i>susurrus</i> on the sofas.
+A sudden alarm, "Look at the deer!" There sure
+enough was a herd of antelopes flying over the scrub
+towards the horizon, which flickered about in the heat
+in a mirage of islands and uplifted mountain ends&mdash;so
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p>After passing Lordsburgh, a desolate spot in the
+desert, there appeared a beautiful mirage. The sand
+became a sheet of water, waveless and mirror-like, and
+in it we saw reflected in trenchant outline the mountain
+range beyond. "It must be water! it is water!"
+exclaimed an unbelieving director. And, lo! as he
+spoke the "dust devils" rose and danced along the
+face of the sea; in another minute the vision was gone;
+the dazzling sand, white, blank and dull, mocked our
+senses. This was near Stein's Pass, up which the train
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_4" id="Page_4">4</a></span>
+of nine carriages was climbing&mdash;"the heaviest train
+that has gone over yet," said the triumphant conductor.
+"But we thought we'd try it." Each waggon weighed
+30 tons. The Pass is three miles long, and we were
+working at a grade of 74 feet with a 19-inch cylinder
+engine.</p>
+
+<p>Between Pyramid Station and San Simon (<i>stant
+nomina umbrarum</i>&mdash;the names of mere shadows of
+stations) the western border of New Mexico is crossed,
+and we enter the great Territory of Arizona, which lies
+between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.</p>
+
+<p>It is bounded by New Mexico on the east, by Mexico
+on the south, by Utah and Nevada on the north and
+north-west, and by California in continuation of the
+western boundary. It is as large as New York,
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware
+together. Whom it belonged to first, so far as occupation
+constitutes possession, I know not; but the
+Spaniards owned and neglected it for more than three
+centuries before the Americans possessed it. In 1848
+and 1853 the regions now forming Arizona, New
+Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and Nevada were ceded by
+the descendants of the Spanish conquerors to the
+conquering Anglo-American. It would need weeks of
+assiduous travel to explore the portion of Arizona
+where the most interesting ruins in America, the
+cities of the Zoltecs or the Aztecs&mdash;for the experts
+differ respecting their origin&mdash;are to be found. The
+weight of authority and of recent investigation leads
+one to believe that the Aztecs were not the builders
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_5" id="Page_5">5</a></span>
+of these ruined cities. Humboldt, indeed, believed
+that they were; but, as Mr. Hinton remarks, in
+his capital little handbook, which I recommend to
+prospectors, emigrants, tourists, and travellers, "to
+suppose such an utter abandonment of settled habitations,
+it will be necessary to suppose some strange
+impelling reasons, either in climate or other causes,
+that must have amounted to a catastrophe. An
+hypothesis which would leave a whole race able to
+conquer an empire, and to preserve power enough to
+abandon without destruction their old homes, implies
+conditions and forces without a known historical
+parallel." The conclusion that many native cities were
+flourishing when the Spaniards arrived in America
+may, perhaps, be questioned. There is a distinctive
+character about them, differing from that of the
+Mississippi mounds, the Central American pyramids, or
+the ruined cities of Yucatan.</p>
+
+<p>The site of one of these cities was pointed out to us
+from the train, and that was all we saw of them.
+But I heard so much about the mysterious remains
+that I was induced to procure Mr. Bancroft's remarkable
+essay on the native races of the Pacific
+Coast. Mr. Bancroft believes that the Pueblos and
+other Indians, in a state of civilisation which they
+subsequently lost, were the earliest inhabitants of these
+countries and the builders of the cities; that the
+Apaches came down upon them, and their work being
+then aided by the Spaniards, this original agricultural
+people were swept off the face of the earth. But
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_6" id="Page_6">6</a></span>
+where the Apaches came from the American ethnologists
+have not, I believe, determined. For hundreds
+of miles these ruins cover the country&mdash;stone houses,
+ancient watch-towers, and adobe buildings, around
+which are quantities of stone implements, masses of
+crockery and pottery. In some places there are structures
+of wood and stone, without iron, the masonry
+consisting of thin plates of sandstone dressed on the
+edges, and laid in coarse mortar nearly as hard as
+the stone itself.</p>
+
+<p>The explorers who have discovered the most interesting
+cities in Arizona and elsewhere were officers
+of the United States army. They have been the true
+pioneers of American civilisation in the West, and
+it is most creditable to them that they have been
+able to furnish so much scientific and antiquarian
+observation in the execution of their arduous and often
+painful duty in Indian warfare. There is no cold
+shade cast upon the labours of officers who desire to
+make a little reputation for themselves by contributions
+to scientific publications, and by papers on natural
+history and the like in periodical publications or in
+the daily press.</p>
+
+<p>There is, as might be expected from its position,
+a very high temperature in Arizona. This lasts
+from the middle of June to the first of October.
+During the best part of summer exertion of any kind
+is impossible. Metal objects cannot be handled without
+producing blisters; rain scarcely ever falls; and,
+to keep up the drain of constant evaporation, a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_7" id="Page_7">7</a></span>
+man must drink a gallon or two gallons of water a
+day. Mr. Ross Brown, speaking of the summer, declares
+that "everything dries. Waggons dry; men
+dry; chickens dry. There is no juice left in anything,
+living or dead, by the close of summer. Officers
+and soldiers creak as they walk; chickens hatched at
+the season come out of the shell ready cooked. Bacon
+is eaten with a spoon, and butter must stand in the
+sun an hour before the flies become dry enough for use.
+The Indians sit in the river with fresh mud on their
+heads, and, by dint of constant dipping and sprinkling,
+manage to keep from roasting, though they usually
+come out parboiled." But, although it is recorded
+that a party encamped on a narrow cañon where
+the temperature was 120 degrees, there was no sunstroke.
+And in that respect the climate differs from
+that on the eastern coast, where, especially this very
+summer, a great number of deaths were caused by
+<i>coup de soleil</i>. People, with the thermometer marking
+94 degrees, talk of its being agreeably cold. An exceedingly
+interesting fact, if it be one, connected
+with residence in this part of the world is the wholesome
+effect of complete abstinence. Death from want
+of water was by no means infrequent in the old days
+before so many wells were dug; but it only occurs
+when there is a good deal of humidity in the air.
+Although alcoholic drinks and tobacco have an injurious
+effect, there is a large consumption of both at
+all the stations and at the mines.</p>
+
+<p>As in the Orange River Free State, where probably
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_8" id="Page_8">8</a></span>
+the conditions of temperature are not very dissimilar,
+pulmonary complaints are cured, so a residence in
+Arizona, it is said, stops consumption; and there
+are authentic statements that people who arrived in
+a rapid decline have experienced almost immediate
+relief of the principal symptoms, and have been finally
+cured. Governor Safford, in an official letter, states
+that his lungs were a good deal diseased, and that he
+was suffering with a severe cough when he reached
+Arizona, and that in six months his cough left him.
+He is satisfied the warm, dry atmosphere acted like a
+healing balm to diseased lungs, and that, the pores
+being kept open, the impurities which attack weak
+organs escape through the skin. Dr. Loryea, of San
+Francisco, and Dr. Sawyer aver that Arizona is
+nature's Turkish bath, and that Yuma, that evil-looking
+place, contains the fountains of health.</p>
+
+<p>Of such vast regions a small acquaintance acquired
+by passing rapidly twice over a line of railway does
+not entitle one to speak; but, if what we read and
+heard of Arizona be true, there is within its limits
+enormous mineral and agricultural wealth. There
+are carboniferous basins of great extent and richness.
+The mountains teem with ore. Silver and gold, copper
+pyrites, zinc, and lead are to be found over a great
+range, the extent of which is as yet imperfectly
+known. There are sulphates of nearly all the metals;
+metallic oxides, chlorides, carbonates, nitrates; agates,
+amethysts, garnets, and other precious stones. People
+there are who believe that the diamond, the emerald,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_9" id="Page_9">9</a></span>
+and the ruby will turn up in due time. In fact, if one
+were to be guided by the accounts in the papers or the
+guide-books, he would think that a sure way of making
+an immediate fortune would be to settle down on any
+hillside in this favourite land. Nevertheless, what
+I saw out of my window gave me reason to suppose
+that there was poverty in Arizona as well as in the old
+country. Nor did the buildings which I saw by the
+way at the sparse stations and infrequent towns give
+an idea that the in-dwellers were well-to-do in the
+world. The adobe, or burnt brick, which is a common
+material in lieu of better, has always a ruinous appearance.
+The houses built of it yesterday seem tumbling
+to pieces from the influences of old age.</p>
+
+<p>We take no note of time save by its relation
+to constant motion, and to the "programme"&mdash;a
+Procrustean bed on which we have voluntarily
+placed our tortured limbs. Sometimes in the hours
+of the night, which could not be called still because
+of the incessant pealing, rattling, and thundering of
+the train, I thought of the wonderful ways of man
+with himself in such affairs as we were now engaged
+in. There is a play of Terence which was
+a trouble to me in my youth, so long ago that I
+remember very little more of it than the dismal and
+elongated name; but Mr. "Heautontimorumenos"
+never needlessly bound himself up in a programme and
+delivered his life over to a time-table! It is likely
+enough, seeing what sort of man he was, that he would
+have adopted that course had he lived in these days.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_10" id="Page_10">10</a></span>
+I admit that programmes are necessary when your
+movements regulate, or have to be regulated by, those
+of other people; and that was the case in some measure
+with us, but the solicitude it occasioned the worthy
+and valued friends, whose brows I perceived becoming
+more puckered, and whose faces and spirits were heavy
+with cares connected with the programme, to come up
+to time, was beyond belief, and I vowed if ever I had my
+own way with the ordering of a party I would have no
+programme at all. And plot and calculate as you will,
+a gale of wind, or a heated axle, or a broken bridge, or
+a flood, upsets everything, and your schemes gang aglee
+utterly! It was admirable to see how we were working
+out the destiny we had made manifest for ourselves
+in advance so long ago, but the task was not
+easy. What curious sounds, by the way, our train
+made at night! One could now and then compose
+words to the tune of the wheels, and the regular rhythm
+forced one at times to hum the words of a song, of which
+the train seemed to hammer out the music. It seemed
+so strange to be turning into bed night after night,
+and waking up to pass the same life day after day,
+like a log of wood carried on by an interminable,
+irresistible torrent.</p>
+
+<p>Provided with books and newspapers, and friends to
+converse with, as well as with sights to see, we had,
+however, no reason to complain that time hung heavy
+on our hands as the train sped on. The books were very
+utilitarian, it is true&mdash;Reports of Chambers of Commerce,
+statistics and papers connected with railway and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_11" id="Page_11">11</a></span>
+commercial enterprise and the like. But our directors
+took to that literature with avidity, and aided by maps
+and tables, copiously furnished to them, seemed bent
+on passing with honours in a competitive examination
+anent the American railway system. There were
+always, close at hand in the cars, competent authorities
+to answer questions, or able champions to engage in
+controversy, and as I heard all the subtle contentions,
+which I did not understand, concerning signalling and
+baggage checking, gauges and engines, curves and
+gradients, freights and fares, I was set to think what
+the field had been in which all the ingenuity and talent
+displayed in dealing with such topics were exercised
+in pre-railway days. These discussions were mostly
+connected with the consideration of profits and percentages,
+and that was a neutral ground on which the
+combatants man&oelig;uvred their facts and figures as in a
+natural "<i>schauplatz</i>". There were times when such
+investigations ran down like a clock, and no one wound
+them up again for a few hours, and then my friends
+digested the remains they found on the field of battle
+and strengthened themselves for friendly jousting.</p>
+
+<p>Not very long ago there would have been exceedingly
+good sporting in many parts of Arizona.
+Grizzly bears, common and black bears; pumas, mountain
+sheep, jaguars, ocelots, opossums, panthers, wolves,
+and lynxes are largely distributed over the hill ranges.
+There are also hares and rabbits and many smaller
+animals. Wild turkeys have much diminished of late
+years; but there is a variety of birds, some of them
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_12" id="Page_12">12</a></span>
+excellent for the spit. The chase, however, is attended
+with some danger, unless one is very well booted and
+looks out where he treads, as rattle-snakes abound, and
+are of exceeding virulence, the black species being
+especially deadly. There are horned toads, but these
+are harmless.</p>
+
+<p>For the botanist Arizona is an almost inexhaustible
+field of delight. Any one who likes to read of vegetable
+wonders, or of an extraordinarily varied flora,
+cannot do better than get Dr. Loryea's work, or read
+'New Mexico,' by Elias Brevoort. The growth which
+struck us most was that of the extraordinary cactus
+called the candelabra or Sahuaro. It is worth while
+going so far as the railway will take one to see these
+plants sticking up on the sides of a rock without a
+trace of verdure or moisture, rising to the height of
+40 or 50 feet, and throwing out enormous arms at the
+most grotesque angles, each varying from the other in
+shape, the number of its arms, and in the manner in
+which they are disposed. This giant cactus is covered
+with prickles, and is of a light green colour. It is
+said that in the old days the Apache Indians not unfrequently
+made use of them as handy means of torture,
+and nailed their victims to a cactus previous to setting
+fire to it. The body of the plant is resinous, and it
+can be easily converted into a bonfire. Here and
+there we saw some with traces of pale yellow flowers.
+When these are gone there is a fruit, which makes an
+excellent preserve, or can be boiled into sugar. Then
+there are prickly pears in great quantities; and there
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_13" id="Page_13">13</a></span>
+is a "negro-head cactus," with a round top covered
+with sharp spines, which furnished the Mexicans with
+fish-hooks. "There is a soul of beauty in things
+evil." If a thirsty traveller coming upon one of these
+plants kindles a fire around it, the juices of its body
+are gradually concentrated into a central cavity, where
+they only wait incision to be liberated in the form of
+a pleasant drink, half a gallon or more in quantity.
+The appliances for getting a drink out of most of
+these roots are described at length in various books
+of travel; but however useful they may have been at
+the time, the activity of the Atchison, Topeka and
+Santa Fé Railway will in all probability exempt
+travellers in future from any necessity to avail themselves
+of these ingenious devices. Trees flourish in
+spite of the heat and want of water. As various as
+the trees are the human inhabitants, and one of
+the greatest marvels connected with them, perhaps,
+is the extraordinary variety of dialects amongst people
+of the same race, who lived in the same country
+long before the white man came to trouble them.
+They are decreasing, of course, in numbers; but in
+some of the reservations they seem to have arrested
+downward progress, and to have taken to some
+form of agricultural labour. At present Arizona is
+the happy hunting-ground of the unfortunate red
+man. There is, I am assured, no disposition on the
+part of the whites to intrude upon the reservations of
+the various tribes. I did not hear of any one who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_14" id="Page_14">14</a></span>
+had come in from the East to settle with the view of
+making his fortune by farming; but miners have
+flooded the cañons, and climbed the mountain-tops;
+and now they have settled down into a steady way of
+life without any big "booms," as the Americans say, but
+with prospects of pretty certain returns for their labour.</p>
+
+<p>All night we travelled on, and when the morning
+came, we were still traversing the desert, still passing
+through one of the most sterile wastes on the face of
+the earth, where, however, by strange contrasts of
+nature&mdash;or is it strange?&mdash;there were in the mountains
+and in the ravines rich ores to tempt the cupidity
+and enterprize of man. We are continually reminded
+of similar wastes in India and in Africa; but no one,
+as far as I know, has yet discovered any mineral
+wealth in the north-western deserts of our Indian
+Empire. And although Captain Burton and others
+have fancied they have come across an El Dorado in
+Southern Egypt, and Ibrahim Pasha had such faith
+in the existence of gold in those regions that he led
+forth an expedition to perish there, there is no such
+fortune in store for the adventurous miner as awaits
+him in Arizona, Colorado, and California.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 1st.</i>&mdash;Everyone who has entered Arizona, or
+left it&mdash;and let us hope he went back all the better
+for his visit&mdash;will recollect Yuma for ever.</p>
+
+<p>Yuma is on the Colorado, which divides California
+from Arizona. The muddy waters of the river rush
+with immense velocity past the buttresses of the fine
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_15" id="Page_15">15</a></span>
+bridge, with a draw for steamers, that spans it. The
+town consists apparently of adobe houses, and these not
+very regularly built. I could not visit the main street
+for lack of time, but the offshoots within eyeshot of us
+were not tempting. All we could see from the railway
+windows were flat-roofed adobe houses, some squalid
+Indians nearly naked, the buildings, with the Stars and
+Stripes over them, of the United States post on the left
+bank, and a few wooden sheds. It is said to be one of
+the hottest places in the world, and certainly looked
+dry and dusty. They say that a soldier who died there
+and went to an unmentionable place, returned in the
+spirit to beg for a blanket, as he felt so cold!</p>
+
+<p>More happily constituted travellers than most of
+us have seen something pleasing in the aspect of the
+country roundabout, and have been moved to much admiration
+by the various tints of the hills in the distance,
+and by the rocks which constitute the near limits of
+the valley through which the river passes. In the old
+days, when the stage-coaches offered the only means of
+travelling through the district, there might have been
+a good deal to see along the road; but the rail generally
+avoids sights, and where nature is at its best, the
+engineer strikes deep down and burrows if he can.
+The colours of the hills are bright and varied; the
+lava rocks are of many shades, and the sun, piercing
+through strata of pure air, illuminates them with
+great vividness and force; but after a time the eye
+tires of the uniform hues of the landscape. For a few
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_16" id="Page_16">16</a></span>
+miles the rail runs close to the river, then plunges
+into the most remorseless, cruel waste of sand and
+rock, spread out up to the foot of the rugged hills of
+the Barnardino Range, I ever beheld&mdash;an abomination
+of desolation compared with which the Libyan Desert
+or the plains of Scinde were the Garden of the Hesperides.
+I cannot describe, nor could I at any time hope
+to succeed in giving an adequate conception of this
+dreadful wilderness. For 107 miles west there is not
+a drop of water to be found; the stations are dependent
+on the railway for their supplies. But
+Nature, as if to take away the reproach of permitting
+such a vast blotch on her fair face, kindly threw in
+Fata Morgana. We saw with delight widespread
+lakes with fairy islands in the midst; placid seas
+washing the base of the distant hills. This baked and
+dreary expanse extends nearly to San Gorgonio. We
+were spared the sandstorms which are so dreadful,
+nor did we experience inconvenience from the dust.
+The traveller, who has begun to despair of ever
+seeing anything greener than giant cacti and the
+adamantine vegetation which dispenses with water,
+is agreeably surprised as he approaches Los Angeles.
+If he be as fortunate as we were in having such friends
+as Colonel Baker and his wife to take charge of him,
+he will be amply repaid for far greater discomforts
+than any he experienced in the Colorado desert. From
+Los Angeles there is a railway to Santa Monica, seventeen
+miles distant, which belongs to Colonel Baker;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_17" id="Page_17">17</a></span>
+and I would advise every one who can, either to spare
+or make the time for a diversion to that most delightful
+spot. Judge of the pleasure we felt when, after a
+picturesque run through orange groves, vineyards, and
+fields of corn and barley, we gazed on the waters of
+the Pacific&mdash;"θαλαττα!
+θαλαττα!" What a glorious
+scene! the broad bay lighted by the rays of the declining
+sun; the blue waves rolling on in solemn
+march, and breaking in long lines of foam on the
+dazzling sand, and nearer still the gardens and trees
+of the Pacific Biarritz which was about to welcome
+us! Our palace-car and its attendant carriages shot
+into a siding close to the beach. In a few minutes
+"every man Jack" was off to the bathing establishment
+to conform to the regulations ere we plunged
+into the sea. It is an orthodox bathing-place of the
+highest order. The Baths are extensive, and provided
+with every convenience and comfort for ladies and invalids;
+hot and cold, salt water and fresh, for those
+who do not like to trust themselves to the sea. A rope
+extended seaward to hold on by was needful, for the
+surf was heavy and the undertow strong. The water
+was delicious. Generally there is less sea on, and it
+is never too hot or too cold for bathing. Next morning
+we had another bath in a still rougher Pacific. The
+Duke and some of the party were driven about the
+country by Colonel and Mrs. Baker, and at 3 <span class="s08">P.M.</span>, to
+our sorrow, we left the most lovable little spot of all
+we have seen on this continent. Good fortune be in
+store for Santa Monica! At Los Angeles, where carriages
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_18" id="Page_18">18</a></span>
+were waiting, we drove through the streets and
+suburbs, which enabled us to appreciate the reasons
+which induced the Spanish founders to give the city its
+name. In the evening we continued our journey,
+passing in the dark over the feat of engineering called
+the Loop.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_19" id="Page_19">19</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER II.<br />
+THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+A new Land of Goshen&mdash;A Jehu indeed&mdash;The Drive to Clarke's&mdash;A
+Mountain Hostelry&mdash;Grizzlies&mdash;Fascination Point&mdash;The
+Merced&mdash;Yosemite Fall&mdash;A Salute&mdash;Mountain Airs&mdash;The Mirror
+Lake&mdash;"See that Rattle?"&mdash;A Philosophic Barber.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>June 2nd.</i>&mdash;It is astonishing how soon one gets
+accustomed to the rattle and rumble of the rail, and
+sleeps all the night through after a time, waking up
+only when a train stops at a station, just as a miller is
+roused by the cessation of the clock of the mill-wheel.
+We keep good hours, and so at 4.30 this morning I
+was looking out of the window at a sea of blue mountain
+ridges upon the west, which looked like the waves of
+the ocean, so varied in the serrated edges was the line
+of stony waves which seemed as if they were about to
+sweep down over the great stretch of prairie. We
+were passing through a new land of Goshen, at least
+that was the name which I detected on the station
+board, indicating a junction with another line, and early
+as was the hour the door of the hospitable restaurant
+was open, and gentlemen in front were to be seen
+drawing their hands across their lips as if they had
+been taking a refresher in the early morning. Close
+at hand the country was perfectly flat, covered with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_20" id="Page_20">20</a></span>
+glorious crops nearly ripe for the sickle, and indeed
+cut and stacked in some places. Water appeared
+abundant; a river flowing west was visible at intervals,
+its course marked by a line of trees. Large black
+cranes stalked about in the meadow-like fields, and
+hares sat up on end to take a look at the train. The
+paucity of human beings, except at the rare stations,
+was remarkable; only when I say "rare," perhaps I am
+scarcely justified, as there were little wooden huts at
+intervals perhaps of ten or twelve miles, where a saloon
+announced itself, and a possible ticket-office.</p>
+
+<p>On the east of the plain through which the line runs,
+the peaks of the Sierra Nevada were visible, but the
+journey was rather monotonous all the same, and we
+were glad when our train halted at Madera, about
+ninety miles from Goshen, where we were to get out
+and start on our expedition to the Yosemite Valley.
+Especial arrangements had been made for our conveyance,
+but I almost doubt now whether it would not
+have been better for us to have taken the ordinary
+carriage which leaves Madera every day, except Monday,
+for the Yosemite Valley, at 7.45, arriving at Clarke's
+or Bruce's in somewhat less than twelve hours, so as
+to bring daylight with it to the halting-place; a very
+desirable thing, as we soon found out. It was 8
+o'clock before our party started from Madera, in two
+Kendal carriages with four horses each. In one was
+the Duke, Lady Green, Mr. Stephen, and myself, with
+Crockett on the box; in another were Sir Henry
+Green, Mr. Wright, Major Anderson, and Mr. Jerome.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_21" id="Page_21">21</a></span>
+Our driver was a man with the impossible name of
+MacLenathan, a resolute, dry, taciturn man, with a
+good face, seamed with the exposure to sun and rain of
+many years on the box. But he told us he had deserted
+it lately, and had taken to the work of livery stable
+keeper, only coming out on this occasion as driver to
+do honour to the Duke. As it turned out, it was well
+his right and his left hand had not lost their cunning.
+The driver of the other carriage was a noted character,
+rejoicing in the name of "Buffalo Bill," and later on
+we had reason to feel very thankful to him also for the
+possession of great pluck and nerve. For some ten or
+twelve miles the route, which consists of mere wheel
+tracks over the prairie, runs over moderately undulating
+land. On the right there is a shoot or <i>flume</i> for
+carrying down timber from the upper part of the
+mountain ridge fifty miles away. The dust was
+troublesome, and the rapid motion of the four horses
+scarcely saved us from the roasting sun. The scenery
+was not interesting; indeed, the great object of
+attraction was the little Californian quail with his
+pretty crest, running across through the grass or
+jumping up upon a stump to have a look at the
+travellers. Stage stables were far apart, but the
+speed was fair, and it was astonishing to see the
+excellent condition in which the horses were at
+the end of their long canter, and what capital steeds
+were taken out of the stalls, in which they were
+feeding on barley-straw, to be put into the traces.
+I think the average length of the stages was about
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_22" id="Page_22">22</a></span>
+twelve miles. We lost about an hour at a little
+mining village where we halted for dinner, a place
+called Coarse Gold, as well as I recollect, consisting
+of the usual buildings, a few shanties, the store, the
+hotel, far better than might have been expected, and
+a sort of wigwam or one-storeyed house, in front of
+which were assembled a number of "Digger Indians,"
+degraded specimens of a degraded tribe. They sat
+looking at the new arrivals in the most apathetic
+manner, just as they might regard so many flies.
+The men were dressed in a compromise of old Indian
+attire, leather leggings and deerskin jackets, with
+European clothing, caps, bad hats and trousers, and
+old boots, the women swathed ungracefully in what
+seemed to be pieces of blanket, their legs encased in
+folds of dirty cotton. One of these Diggers was
+very slightly dressed, and as it is intensely cold in
+the winter, we asked him whether he did not feel
+the effect of the frost and snow. He knew a little
+English, and made the most of it. "When your body
+is covered you do not feel the cold," he said; "But
+your face is always uncovered, and yet you do not feel
+the cold there. An Indian's body is all face." And
+that was all the explanation he would vouchsafe
+to us. Somehow or another, what with delays at the
+stations, possibly caused by our being out of the
+regular running, and being an interpolation on the
+ordinary course of travel, and possibly owing to our
+reduced speed, for the carriages with four horses
+did not, it seems, go as fast as the public conveyance
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_23" id="Page_23">23</a></span>
+with six, it was getting dark as we approached
+the line of wooded hills, in a valley in which, many
+miles away, lay our halting-place for the night. The
+result of our delay in starting, concerning which
+the driver had been severe from time to time, was
+startlingly manifest as the coaches mounted the
+steep ascents of one of the most tortuous roads in
+the world. The spurs of the hills come down very
+sharply to the valley, and the road is carried round by a
+series of very severe gradients following the contour
+of the mountain-chain, so that at one time there is a
+deep gorge on your left, and then, as the road leaves
+that spur with the valley on that side and crosses to
+another spur, there is a great descent on the right, so
+that you are continually passing along by a series of
+precipices, to which, in our case, the fast gathering
+gloom imparted additional horror. Through the
+sighing of the wind in the trees aloft came the roar
+of the torrents down below. The drivers went along
+at a good steady canter, and from time to time, as we
+came round a sharp curve, I dare say the thought was
+in every one's mind, what would happen if one of the
+leaders fell, or if the driver slipped his hand in gathering
+up the reins to go round the corner. The scenery
+became more wild and formidable, so to speak, at every
+fresh turn. The colossal trees, which challenged
+admiration in the daytime, closed up in greater volume,
+darkening the narrow road completely, so that in an
+hour after entering upon the mountain-range it became
+as black as pitch. The lamps of Buffalo Bill
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_24" id="Page_24">24</a></span>
+in the leading carriage were some guide to our driver.
+He had none, and it was with anxiety, renewed every
+ten minutes or so, that we saw the lights in front
+describe a graceful curve, which showed that they
+were passing by one of the dips or cuts of the road.
+It needed skill and judgment for MacLenathan to
+conduct the carriage, because if he drove too close to
+that in front of us, the clouds of dust obscured the
+view, and if he dropped too far behind he lost the
+benefit of the lights. By enormous trunks of trees,
+by piles of timber, through deep cuttings in the rock,
+plashing over watercourses, descending swiftly into
+river-beds, and splashing through the fords over
+boulders, then climbing up steep hillsides, on and
+on, it seemed as though the night would never
+come to an end, and we inwardly, and audibly too, expressed
+our regret that we had not started a little
+earlier; but still there was an almost pleasurable
+excitement in holding on as we swept round one of
+these terrible gorges, and tried to look down into
+the gulf beneath. That last stage seemed interminable,
+but towards 9 o'clock at night the driver of the
+coach in front announced that we were getting "near
+at last"; and lucky it was, for his lights were giving
+out. "It is just as well that they did not," said our
+driver, "because it would be bad for you." "Why?"
+"Well," he said, "you would just have to get out
+and walk! I would not undertake to drive any one
+in the dark along such a road as this." Presently we
+heard the noise of rushing water, and gained the bank
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_25" id="Page_25">25</a></span>
+of a stream flowing with swiftness over a shingle bed.
+This we crossed, and in half an hour more, through
+the dark belt of trees in front, lights were discerned,
+and, crossing another stream and a bridge, our wearied
+horses were pulled up in front of the hotel, a large
+wooden building, on the steps of which were the landlord
+and his staff, and most of the inmates turned out
+to greet and inspect the travellers who had been long
+expected. "It is a bad country to go driving about
+in the dark," said Mr. Bruce, the landlord, a sentiment
+in which we thoroughly agreed. There was a
+supper in the common room, to which, albeit the fare
+was primitive enough, we did ample justice. Travellers
+have complained of the charges along the road,
+but, considering the distance which all articles have
+to be carried to the Valley, the heavy duties, and the
+shortness of the season, I do not think that any one
+with experience of Swiss inns would complain much;
+and if the traveller desires to drink claret, he must not
+be astonished if he pays eight or nine shillings a bottle
+for it. The ordinary fare, at hotel prices, is quite
+good enough for hungry people, and eggs, milk, and
+bread are abundant, and not dear. The bedrooms,
+sufficiently simple in all their appointments, are good
+enough to be welcome to tired people, for there is
+a fair bed to lie upon, and the sheets, as far as our
+experience went, were clean and fresh. Nor were the
+insect horrors, of which we may have some knowledge
+in parts of Europe, to be dreaded, not even
+mosquitoes at this time of year.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_26" id="Page_26">26</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Soon after dawn a thunderstorm broke over the
+valley, hail and torrents of rain, and the landlord congratulated
+us upon the cooling effect it would have on
+the air, and on the absence of dust, which is rather troublesome
+at times. It was necessary to make an early
+start in the morning, for it is a long journey to the
+Yosemite. For some years past the Valley has become a
+kind of American Chamouni, and if Americans swarm
+over Europe in search of the sublime and beautiful,
+they cannot be accused of neglecting altogether their
+own country. The first thing I saw, on walking out
+on the verandah of the hotel, was the stage-coach and
+six horses, with eight ladies and nine gentlemen,
+loading up for the Valley. They had arrived late the
+night before, a little in advance of us, and yet the
+ladies, bravely attired for the road, were all in their
+place in the <i>char à bancs</i> long before 7. Travellers
+frequently stay at Bruce's, and our host promises
+good sport to any one who will make it his headquarters;
+but I cannot speak with any confidence on
+that point myself; still I should think it a very pleasant
+quarter for a man who had nothing else to do,
+and who had an aptitude for climbing, to go about
+looking out big game. We heard talk of pheasants,
+but saw none: the bird which is called by that name
+not being entitled to it, according to ornithologists.
+In front of the hotel was laid out the skin of
+a cinnamon bear, which had been shot by an Austrian
+gentleman&mdash;"<a name="Fritz" id="Fritz">Count Fritz Thumb</a>," the landlord called
+him&mdash;a few days previously, and which was to be sent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_27" id="Page_27">27</a></span>
+after him as a trophy of his skill. "But," says
+Boniface, "it was not he shot him at all; it was 'is
+old Injun hunter." Grizzlies, he said, were rare, but
+they were to be found if you went up high enough,
+and as he spoke he pointed up to the mountains
+towering away in the distance in grand Alpine proportions.
+Deer were common enough, and there were
+some tame specimens of the ordinary black deer
+running about in the enclosure. We had an early
+start, but not quite so early as the Americans; and it
+was wonderful how well our four hardy horses did
+the first stage, six and twenty miles, including some
+very sharp ascents from the Hotel.</p>
+
+<p>From time to time we got out and walked up the
+sharp bits, diverging to the right or left to gather the
+lovely flowers which grew on the roadside, or halting
+to admire the giant trees which clothed the mountain
+ridges. Pitiable ignorance! not to know the names of
+the plants or shrubs or wonderful bunches of blossoms,
+among which fluttered the most magnificently coloured
+butterflies. Woodpeckers of many different species
+uttered their quaint notes in jerky flight from tree to
+tree, or peered at the travellers from the shelter of the
+branches. Firs, pines, and spruces of enormous size,
+and trees to me unknown, formed a dense forest on
+each side of the road; but now and then we caught
+glimpses of the stupendous ranges of the alps beyond.
+It was lamentable to see the waste and wreck wrought
+in this wondrous wealth of timber&mdash;reckless, wicked
+waste. Charred trunks stood with leafless arms
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_28" id="Page_28">28</a></span>
+withered and black, or lay prone among the ferns in
+myriads. This was, we were told, the work of shepherds,
+who think nothing of setting fire to one of the
+finest trees in the world to warm themselves for an
+hour, and are delighted with a conflagration which
+may lay a hillside in ashes. And the Indians too are
+held to have their share in the destruction. There
+was enough of timber wasted and destroyed mile after
+mile to build a city. The nemesis must come; already
+the alarm has been sounded, and the State authorities
+here and elsewhere are trying to prevent the mischief.
+I have often had occasion to regret my ignorance of
+botany <i>inter alia</i>; but never did I feel it more than
+when I was walking up the road, on each side of
+which was a carpet of flowers, a maze of shrubs and
+plants&mdash;dense brushwood&mdash;to not one of which could
+I give a name. We arrived at the Halfway House at
+12.35 as much pleased as the horses which brought us
+there so well at the respite, for it was an awful "pull
+up," and the coachman did his work at high pressure.
+In the course of our pilgrimage we had found a very
+pleasant <i>divertissement</i>. The Major, Mr. White, and
+Mr. Jerome had excellent voices, and from time to time
+they burst into song, giving with great effect the
+quaint negro melodies, which are now made familiar to
+us in London, from a very large <i>répertoire</i>; and so the
+afternoon passed in quiet enjoyment as we climbed the
+hills on foot or in the carriages&mdash;snatches of talk,
+exclamations of wonder and delight, and outbursts
+of the 'Golden Slipper,' 'O! that 'Possum,' 'The
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_29" id="Page_29">29</a></span>
+Ark,' 'John Brown,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' and other
+choruses.</p>
+
+<p>It was near 4 o'clock when the driver, who had been
+silent for some time, looking round at us occasionally
+as one who would say, "Wait a little till I surprise
+you," suddenly pulling up, said, "Now, here you are.
+This is Fascination Point! Won't you get down
+a bit?" And, lo! there indeed lay before us a scene
+of indescribable grandeur. I know nothing like the
+effect produced by Yosemite Valley when seen for the
+first time from this point. It has a characteristic
+which no other similar view I am acquainted with
+possesses. You take in at one glance stupendous
+mountain-ranges, all but perpendicular, beyond which
+you see the snowy crests of the great Sierra, the
+profound valley between them, a long vista of extraordinary
+magnificence, of cascades and precipitous
+waterfalls, and far down below a silvery river rushing
+through a forest composed of the noblest trees in the
+world, with patches of emerald-green sward and bright
+meadows.</p>
+
+<p>I see that by a slip of the pen I have miscalled the
+place from which we got our first view of the wondrous
+scene. But I have a right to change the name for my
+own use. What the driver said was "Inspiration
+Point." I prefer my mistake, for the view inspires
+you with no feeling save that of wonder and delight.
+These sublime scenes appear to be beyond the reach of
+poetry. Niagara and the Yosemite have not yet found
+a laureate. The peculiar and unique feature of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_30" id="Page_30">30</a></span>
+valley seems to me to be the height and boldness of
+the cliffs which spring out from the mountain-sides
+like sentinels to watch and ward over the secrets of
+the gorge; next to that is the number and height of
+the waterfalls; but it is only by degrees and by comparison
+that the mind takes in the fact that the cliffs
+are not hundreds, but thousands of feet high&mdash;that
+these bright, flashing, fleecy cataracts fall for thousands
+of feet&mdash;that the rent which has been torn in the
+heart of the mountains, till it is closed by the awful
+granite portals beyond which no mortal may pass,
+extends for miles. I thought as I gazed that it were
+pity to descend, lest a nearer view might destroy the
+effect of that <i>coup d'&oelig;il</i>; but the driver had regulated
+the period for rapture. He whipped us up to our
+places by word of mouth, and the carriages renewed
+their course, now striking by bold zigzags down into
+the valley for our destination, which was still six
+miles away. I shall not attempt to describe my own
+feelings, far less can I pretend to tell what others,
+probably far more susceptible of the beauty and
+grandeur of what we beheld than I am, may have felt
+at the succession of the awe-inspiring revelations
+of the tremendous grandeur of the Valley which came
+upon us. What is the use of rolling off a catalogue of
+names and figures?&mdash;even the brush of the painter,
+charged with the truest colours and guided by the
+finest hand and eye, could never do justice&mdash;that is,
+could never give a just idea of these cliffs and waterfalls.
+"El Capitan! Oh, that's the name, is it?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_31" id="Page_31">31</a></span>
+Three thousand three hundred feet high!" And then
+you try to take in what that means. "And it's 3500
+feet down to the Valley? Dear me!" "And that is
+the Cathedral Rock? And those two peaks are the
+Spires? I don't exactly see the resemblance; do
+you?"</p>
+
+<p>There was a sort of wail of delight from us all as we
+came on the "Bridal Veil Fall"; and I do not think
+any one cared to know that it was just 60 short of
+1000 feet high! Surely one of the most graceful,
+lovely <i>chutes d'eau</i> on earth, lost though it be from
+view behind the rocks at the close of its feathery
+flight! But there was no stopping to look at anything;
+relentless Fate drove us down and on, till the
+wheels rolled more evenly, and at last we came to
+the bed of the valley&mdash;some 1800 yards broad, opening
+out here and there yet wider&mdash;and we rejoiced in the
+sight of the bright clear water of the Merced, child
+of innumerable icy mothers, flashing, sparkling, dashing
+and brawling, like a myriad Lodores, between her
+banks decked with flowers and covered with forest
+trees.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly there dashed out of a glade two cavaliers,
+and made full tilt at the leading carriage. "To
+arms!" Not a bit of it! Nor banditti or Injuns&mdash;of
+whom we had met one or two riding sullenly along
+to the hunting-grounds&mdash;no, only two hotel touts
+armed with cards of self-commendation, and not apparently
+in much rivalry, for when told that we had
+engaged our hotel, they galloped off to waylay other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_32" id="Page_32">32</a></span>
+travellers, of whose coming they were apprized by our
+driver. Our hotel, I may say by the way, gave us
+full contentment. The site was admirable, commanding
+a full and near view of <i>the</i> Fall of Falls&mdash;the
+Yosemite&mdash;which had so fascinated our eyes that
+we could scarce divert them to any other object&mdash;not
+"Widow's Tears," or "Virgin's Tears," nor the
+"Three Brothers," not anything but the Yosemite!
+And so, when our rooms were pointed out, we made
+off to the spot where the fine cloudlike vapour
+rising above the tree-tops indicated the basin into
+which the waters sought rest after their troubled
+leap.</p>
+
+<p>Our way lay through the usual gathering of stores,
+hotels, livery stables for the horses and ponies
+needed for the excursions, and curiosity dealers' shops,
+to the village street, as it may be termed, shadowed
+by fine trees, under which reposed some Indians&mdash;one
+of whom, an Amazon in yellow toga, went riding full
+gallop past us, her hair falling in a black mat on her
+shoulders, sitting low, in Melton style, regardless of
+poultry, children, and boulders, and vanishing in a
+cloud of dust under the trees. Then we turned to the
+left and crossed the river by a rustic bridge; and as I
+looked down into the dancing waters certain shadow-like
+objects flew up against the current. "Trout?"
+asked I. "Yes, they're trout. They take 'em&mdash;when
+they dew&mdash;five pounds weight. The Injuns catch
+'em. We don't understand it as well." A short walk,
+with eyes ever up-turned, and we come out to a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_33" id="Page_33">33</a></span>
+moraine, and, clambering up over a mass of trunks of
+trees and decaying timber, <i>the</i> Falls were before us&mdash;I
+cannot write more&mdash;no adjective will do. "Two
+thousand six hundred and thirty-four feet, mind!"
+says the voice. "I don't care," thought we, "it's
+the most beautiful and wonderful water-jump ever
+seen by human eye." "It only remains," as they
+say, to state that there is first, falling over a sheet
+of granite straight as a wall, a considerable river,
+which in the plunge comes down at once 1600 feet.
+There, in a basin of rock, it collects its scattered
+forces, under cover of eternal spray and cloud, and
+then takes another header of 434 feet to a barrier
+of granite, against which it rages for a mad moment,
+till it swells over and escapes from control by another
+spring of 600 feet sheer down&mdash;and now it is free,
+and rushes past at our feet, a joyous flashing stream.</p>
+
+<p>We returned through the meadows from the Falls,
+and as I was walking in advance of the party a
+snake wriggled across the path, which I struck at
+instinctively with my stick, and was lucky enough to
+kill at the first blow. I exhibited the carcass, or
+whatever a snake's dead body may be, in triumph to
+my companions. Further on our way we fell in with
+an old Frenchman who was carrying a basket of fruit
+from his little garden to the inn. With all the
+courtesy of his country, he offered to Lady Green the
+choicest in his little <i>corbeille</i>. He came from Lorraine
+very long ago to prospect in the States, almost the
+earliest of the pioneers, but he was still strong and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_34" id="Page_34">34</a></span>
+active, and he pointed with great satisfaction up to
+a white flag planted on a dizzy height above, which
+he said he had placed with his own hands. The chief
+livery stable keeper is a German named Stegman. The
+first ascent of the Dome was made by a young Scotchman
+named Anderson, from Montrose; so with Indians,
+Americans, Mexicans, Europeans, there is a very
+liberal representation of the nations of the world, in
+the season, in the valley. Mr. Hutchinson, the Conservator
+of the Valley&mdash;one with all the enthusiasm
+of the American character in everything pertaining
+to the country, aggravated in this instance by an
+intense admiration for the valley over which he is
+appointed to watch&mdash;joined us at dinner in the little
+inn. Full of information, bubbling over with anecdote
+and illustration, and replete with all kinds of knowledge
+concentrated upon the one object&mdash;the Valley&mdash;the
+Valley&mdash;and nothing but the Valley. He knows its
+history since the time it was first discovered, and
+its natural history and geological formation, and all
+about the Indians who lived there and their traditions.
+It so happened that the Commissioners of
+the State of California, who are bound to visit the
+public domains, were also at the hotel, and so we
+had quite an unofficial and ceremonious meeting; and
+presently, as we stood in front of the hotel gazing
+up on the peaks, lighted up by the stars, and
+listening to the thunder of the waterfall, a startling
+report burst out on the night, and in another instant
+the echoes repeated from rock to rock were crashing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_35" id="Page_35">35</a></span>
+through the Valley with the roar of heaven's artillery.
+It was the first gun of a salute ordered by the Commissioners
+to be fired in honour of the Duke's arrival.
+The effect was very fine, but I doubt whether I did not
+feel full of resentment at the outburst, very much as
+the owls and night-hawks might have been expected to
+feel, if one could judge from their cries. However,
+even a salute and echoes must come to an end, and
+as we were to get up early to start for the Mirror Lake,
+we turned in to bed at an early hour; not, however, to
+sleep, because the indefatigable and numerous company
+in the public room, off which were our bedrooms, were
+in high spirits, and the song and the dance, to the
+accompaniment of an invalid piano, for some time
+asserted their sway.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Hutchinson had the Duke out early, because it
+is one of the obligations to see the sun rise, reflected
+in the Mirror Lake&mdash;if you can. There is no fear of
+cloud or rain. In the Mirror Lake is reflected&mdash;or
+was as we saw it&mdash;the precipice at the other side of
+the Valley, the bulk of Mount Watkins (so called from
+a photographer who has been daring and successful in
+his renderings of the Yosemite), and all the surrounding
+scenery. Once a friend and I saw a cow on its
+back in the air, by the shore of a Highland lake.
+The surface was smooth as that of the Mirror before
+us now. It was flapping its tail from side to side,
+and its forelegs were up in the sky. We could not
+make it out at first. There was, in fact, a cow
+standing near the water of the loch; and what we saw
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_36" id="Page_36">36</a></span>
+was a reflection of the animal, actually stronger and
+better defined than the object itself. So it was with
+the reflections in the Mirror Lake; but when the sun
+rose over the cliff and we looked at the water, the
+glare was too dazzling. "It was," as Mr. Wright
+remarked, "like the electric light." There were
+curious optical effects produced, some being troubled
+with purple, others with green or yellow in their eyes,
+after a vain attempt to look at the reflection, but that
+did not last long.</p>
+
+<p>We returned to breakfast to make an early start for
+Union and Glacier Points on ponies. Among the
+company at the hotel, introduced by Mr. Hutchinson,
+there was a young lady who was well acquainted with
+the Valley, and who proved to be a very agreeable
+companion in our mountain ride; but it was not long
+ere she was candid enough to let it be known that
+she did not visit the Yosemite out of love of the picturesque
+and beautiful, but that she was interested in
+the sale of photographs of the Valley, and was, in
+fact, a very persuasive and efficient agent of a firm
+in San Francisco, who had thus established an outlying
+picket of great activity and vigilance; and I am sure
+we all hope she may always be as successful with the
+visitors as she was with us. Of what we saw from the
+Glacier Point I must leave others to write or speak.
+It is reached by a zigzag on the mountain-side&mdash;a
+peculium of the maker, and all the "trails," as they are
+called, in the valley are the property of individuals or
+firms who are paid by tariff, and we heard "Eleven
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_37" id="Page_37">37</a></span>
+gone up before&mdash;Duke Sutherland, Lady Green, Sir
+Green, Mr. Wright, Mr. Russell, Mr. Jerome coming!
+Sixteen coming up behind!" On the plateau behind
+the cliffs, from which you look down on the Valley and
+at the snowfields on the mountain ranges opposite,
+there is a log house and shanty, and there we had
+a mountain meal ere we began the descent.</p>
+
+<p>Nothing in the way of riding is more disagreeable
+than going down a very sharp mountain-side on a
+pony not, for all you know, very sure-footed, and so
+instead of riding, I resolved to walk, now and then
+taking a short cut, to the great discomfiture of feet
+and boots, although it is three thousand feet to the
+bottom, and make the best of my way and the
+most of the road, which is very fair, down the zig zags.
+I reached the plain thoroughly hot and tired,
+and bathed in perspiration, in fifty-seven minutes.
+The horsekeeper, who came down with the rest of
+the party, seemed to have been affected by the
+rarity of the atmosphere or something else up at the
+mountain hostelry, for he insisted on it that I had
+ridden down, and demanded his horse. "What the
+thunder, Russell, have you done with my horse?" he
+asked again and again. Satisfied for the time by my
+assurances that I had not ridden at all, he went off, and
+then, thinking over the matter, came back again to
+repeat his question, till I told him I would not answer
+it any more. He was an amusing fellow in his way,
+and affable. He called the Duke "Sutherland," now
+and then putting Mr. before it. As he was watering
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_38" id="Page_38">38</a></span>
+his horses, he said: "Here, Mister Sutherland, lay
+hold of the bucket, will you, whilst I take a turn at
+this one." And the Duke did so with alacrity. It was
+a day of incessant activity. No sooner had the mountain
+party come down than they were off again to drive
+through the Valley. The rest of our party had already
+executed masterly investigations at the foot of all the
+waterfalls; admired the Bridal Veil and the Widow's
+Tear, as one cascade is satirically termed, "because,"
+says the guide, "it dries up in six months;" had
+driven and ridden everywhere and seen everything,
+and we had to do the same; but it would need a week
+of conscientious work to exploit the Valley thoroughly.
+At half-past 7, the dinner hour, the little inn was
+swarming with people; the stage had arrived with
+fresh contingents. Every place was full, and what
+with the clatter of knives and forks, the clamour of
+waiters, the tumult of voices laughing and talking, it
+was scarcely possible to conceive that a few short years
+ago this valley was in the exclusive possession of the
+Indian and the wild beast. There is now, however, a
+great conflict of interests, and Mammon is holding his
+revels in the Valley. The State has voted a certain
+sum of money, twenty-five thousand dollars, I think, to
+buy up the interests of the trail-makers; that is, those
+who struck out and made paths to the various objects
+of attraction; but no success has yet been attained
+in the negotiations, and, indeed, I should think it
+a very bad investment for most of them to accept
+their share of such a sum. Macaulay, for example,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_39" id="Page_39">39</a></span>
+who made the path up to the point from which we
+descended to-day, must make many hundreds of dollars
+in the height of the season, as he charges so much a
+visitor, and, besides, has a restaurant where they take
+their meals at the top.</p>
+
+<p>Next day (June 5th) we left the Yosemite with the
+satisfactory assurance that we had made the most of
+our time, though we could not believe we had done it
+justice. There were some small "nuages" on the face
+of our "Mirror Lake," caused by changes in the mode
+of conveyance; but we found six horses and one of the
+coaches of the country were better than four horses
+and two carriages of less capacity. Yosemite, I may
+tell my readers, means "Grizzly Bear" (it may be
+"Great Grizzly Bear"); but we only heard of one
+having been thereabouts for a long time, and I believe
+it was thoroughly tamed. After a glorious day in
+the woods, clambering up the steep from the Valley,
+and then on by the road&mdash;the only one&mdash;to Clarke's,
+halted there for the night, when we returned from a
+ceremonious visit to the "Big Trees." We had a most
+delightful ride from Bruce's, and a hard canter back
+through the woods on capital ponies, full of life and
+action, and very sure-footed, but rather inclined to
+have their own way, which was not always that of the
+rider. We turned into bed at Bruce's, quite delighted
+with our expedition, and rather anxious to see the
+road we had traversed in the dark by the garish light
+of day. Every traveller's tale, and every guide-book of
+recent date relating to this part of the world, has a full
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_40" id="Page_40">40</a></span>
+account of the dimensions, number, appearance, and
+condition of these wonders of the world. They are either
+prostrate, mutilated, or decaying; not one has survived
+the stormy life he must have led for some 3000 years&mdash;a
+few hundreds more or less do not signify. Those
+which remain upright are scarred by fire and lightning,
+and drop their monster arms, hung with ragged foliage
+and sheets of bright moss, mournfully over the ground
+where their trunks will repose in time to come.
+I cannot conceive any object of the kind so magnificent
+as one of those Washingtonias in the full vigour of
+mature treehood; but we could only fancy what it
+must have been like by measuring the stems, for there
+was not anywhere in the forest a tree to be seen which
+had not suffered. The best way to visit the scene&mdash;for
+it may well be called so&mdash;is to strike out from the
+road on the way to the Yosemite before the halt at
+Bruce's; but the hotel-keepers and stage-drivers will
+persuade the stranger, if they can, to defer the
+excursion till his return from the Valley, so as to make
+a half-day more out of him.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 6th.</i>&mdash;All up at 5 o'clock, and off soon after
+6 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> The first stage, eleven miles, we did in two
+hours and ten minutes&mdash;a very pretty road; the
+second stage, eight miles, in forty-four minutes. The
+ravages made by fires are most deplorable. We had
+passed through this great forest track in the dark, but
+now seen in the morning light, the trunks of magnificent
+trees rotting on the ground, or standing upright
+with lifeless arms, consumed at the base, were visible
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_41" id="Page_41">41</a></span>
+everywhere. It is difficult to find out the exact truth
+about the cause of these fires. Some few people said
+"it was the Indians," but the weight of testimony attributes
+them to the shepherds, who for the most trifling
+purposes kindle a great fire. In some of the large
+trees they have hollowed out regular chambers, and of
+course the tree dies. Such waste of timber! For
+mile after mile we passed scenes of desolation which
+ere long those who allowed them will have cause to
+regret. From time to time we encountered on the
+road trains of waggons drawn by teams of handsome
+mules with bells, and had occasion to admire the
+economy of labour exhibited in the management, by
+which the driver is enabled to work a powerful break
+with one hand whilst he drives with the other. The
+next stage, of fourteen miles, was over an exceedingly
+bad road; but the horses were good, and we rattled
+along at a capital speed down towards the plain. Once
+the quick-eyed driver, pulling up suddenly, said, "See
+that rattle?" leaped down and made towards the
+bush; and as we followed him, sure enough we heard
+distinctly the noise of the snake, which he had intercepted
+on its way to a rabbit hole. It took refuge in
+a clump of bushes with gnarled roots, and coiled itself
+round one of the branches; but by a course of judicious
+and rather nervous poking it was driven from its
+vantage ground, and trying to escape was killed by
+the driver with a blow of his whip, followed by a good
+many unnecessary strokes from the rest of the party.
+It was over three feet long, and had just been making
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_42" id="Page_42">42</a></span>
+an evening meal upon a rabbit, which it had left
+where we had startled it; and it was evident from its
+swollen appearance that it had been for some time
+engaged in the warren close at hand.</p>
+
+<p>At 10.20 we reached Fresno, which is what the
+Americans call "quite a place," containing not only an
+hotel, a restaurant, and a store, but a shop where
+photographs were exhibited. The <i>chef-d'&oelig;uvre</i>, a
+portrait of a Spanish lady 140 years of age, living at
+Los Angeles, did not, however, commend itself to our
+taste. We halted at Coarse Gold at 11.40, and left at
+12.35. Mr. Jerry Loghlan&mdash;who excused himself for
+not working on the ground that "there was no use
+in it, as there was nothing to be had," the mines being
+worked "out"&mdash;whose acquaintance we had made on
+the way up, a huge, broad-shouldered <i>vaurien</i>, was still
+hanging about with his specimens of quartz, gold, and
+rattlesnakes' tails, and a black eye recently acquired
+in battle.</p>
+
+<p>After a long, hot, and dusty drive, it was with
+no small gratification we made out on the flat the
+houses of Madera, and after a time the carriages of the
+special train. The air is so bright and pure that
+the distances are very deceptive, and it was nearly
+5 o'clock <span class="s08">P.M.</span> before we reached the station, which
+had been visible for more than an hour previously.
+It was pleasant news to hear that the little German
+barber at the way-side had got baths all ready. In
+the rear of his shop there was a row of apartments,
+each provided with a clean zinc bath, hot and cold
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_43" id="Page_43">43</a></span>
+water to turn on at discretion, and an abundance of
+towels. This in the centre of a waste seemed very
+creditable to the civilisation of the people. I should
+like to know in what part of Europe you would get
+similar comfort under similar circumstances. I am
+afraid there are many parts of the British Islands
+where a traveller would demand such a luxury in vain.
+And the barber was there to shave those who needed
+it, and to give you all the news of the day if you
+wanted it. He was a Prussian, and he grinned from
+ear to ear as, in reply to my question whether he
+had served, he said: "Serve, indeed! Not I. I came
+away and escaped from all that nonsense. There is
+not a king or an emperor or a prince that I would
+fight for. Why should I?" "But," said I, "you
+would have to fight for the Republic here if it were in
+danger; and that would not be fighting for your
+fatherland." "Yes," said he, "it would, for this is
+my fatherland now. But I do not want to fight for
+it either if I can help it. Fighting is nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>Our excellent stewards received us, if not with open
+arms, with smiling faces. The carriages were trim
+and clean and fresh, the tables spread out, and all
+kinds of dainties provided for the evening meal. We
+rested quietly for the night in the siding at Madera,
+and got under weigh at 5 o'clock on the morning of
+June 7th, the train being timed so as to reach San
+Francisco at 12.30.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_44" id="Page_44">44</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER III.<br />
+SAN FRANCISCO.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+The Palace Hotel&mdash;General McDowell&mdash;Palo-Alto&mdash;The "Hoodlums"&mdash;The
+Real Sir Roger&mdash;Exiles in the Far West&mdash;The
+Chinese Population&mdash;For and Against them&mdash;The Sand Lot&mdash;Fast
+Trotters&mdash;The Sea Lions&mdash;The Diamond Palace&mdash;The
+Coloured Population&mdash;"Eastward Ho!"
+</p>
+
+<p>The British Consul, Mr. Booker, who has been
+watching over the interests of the Queen's subjects
+for some thirty years here, and who is an institution
+by himself, met the train at a place called, I think,
+Porta Costa, and welcomed the Duke and his friends.
+There had been for some days an infusion of the
+Chinaman in the general element of life along the
+line, but here it became concentrated, and then ceased
+to attract much attention. As the train approached
+the wide expanse of muddy water from the Sacramento,
+which charges down with impetuous volume,
+and colours the bay with its turbid stream, we could
+form an idea of some of the advantages in the expanse
+of navigable river, that had, however, lain long without
+appreciation but for the bright red gold possessed
+by San Francisco. The bay is animated; white canvassed
+craft stud its waters, and the smoke of steamers
+pollutes the clear, bracing air. Italian fishermen are
+busy with line and net, and flights of ducks and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_45" id="Page_45">45</a></span>
+squadrons of gulls and cormorants show that the
+waters are well stocked. It was too late in the year
+to see the country in the full affluence of its wealth
+of fruit and crops, of hay and corn, and the hillsides
+and fields are now disappointingly brown. Presently
+we arrived at Oakland, where the train was run out
+on a pier 3500 yards long, to the steam ferry-boat
+which was to convey us across to San Francisco. The
+ferry-boat was crowded, for Oakland is a city of some
+50,000 people; and of course it had once on a time,
+not very remote, only a few sheds and insignificant
+houses. From this side of the bay the city of the
+Golden Gate, some miles away, was now visible in all
+its pride of place&mdash;pride but not beauty, now at least&mdash;for
+the city presents no great attraction to the
+eye. The streets, running in parallel lines at right
+angles to the quay right up the sandy hillside,
+look like the ribs of some stranded monster, "lank
+and lean and brown." The most prominent object is
+the hotel to which we are going, which towers far
+over the general level of house-top, steeple, and factory-chimney.</p>
+
+<p>There is a little pamphlet, crammed with statistics
+and with an array of figures and superlatives enough to
+daze one, given to the guests of the Palace Hotel; but
+those who are in that happy category scarcely need the
+information, and those who are not could not derive
+any idea of the building from the repetition of the
+ciphers which are to be found in the guide-book.
+The drawing on the outside affords the best notion of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_46" id="Page_46">46</a></span>
+the size, but only actual purview can enable one to
+judge of the excellent arrangements, the service, the
+table. For once the American idol "Immensity" is
+not overlaid. "'Tis blinding bright&mdash;'tis blazing
+white! O Vulcan! what a glow!" Electric lights
+flooding the court with brightness beyond description.
+And what a court! Sweetness and light indeed!
+In the great quadrangle, 144 feet by 84, there are
+fountains playing, groups of statuary, and exotic plants,
+and, tier after tier, rise the pillared terraces outside
+the seven storeys of which the main building consists,
+painted a lustrous white, shining like purest Parian.
+There are 755 rooms, abounding in conveniences,
+and comfortably luxurious. Each is provided with
+high-pressure hot and cold water, and there is an
+elaborate system of ventilation, alarms, conductors,
+pneumatic tubes, telephones, and "annunciators" for
+fire, letters, servants, &amp;c. The beds are excellent; the
+furniture admirable; and this vast structure, 120 feet
+high, 275 feet broad, and 350 feet deep, is not only fire,
+but&mdash;listen&mdash;"earthquake proof"; so says the bill of
+fare, and so says ex-Senator W. Sharon, the proprietor.
+I have not the least desire to test the truth of the averment,
+but if I must be in a hotel when an earthquake
+visits the city in which I am, let me be in the Palace,
+San Francisco. A man may live here in the enjoyment
+of a pretty continuous series of meals and one of the
+best bedrooms for four dollars a day, and there is a
+lower tariff of bed and board at three dollars a day.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 8th.</i>&mdash;Our first day was rendered exceedingly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_47" id="Page_47">47</a></span>
+pleasant by the kindness of General McDowell. The
+weather did its very best to prevent our enjoying it, and
+was signally defeated. San Francisco is perhaps the
+windiest city in the world, and at this time of year there
+is almost always a storm in the harbour, and a steady,
+powerful, and somewhat chilly blast, setting in a little
+before noon, and lasting throughout the day until
+nearly sundown, up the streets. The General's aide-de-camps
+came over early to the hotel, in full uniform,
+in honour of Major-General Green, but General
+McDowell appeared in mufti, which eased us down
+a little. A powerful steamer, the "<i>General Macpherson</i>,"
+was prepared for the party, which was
+swollen by a considerable number of gentlemen invited
+by our host to meet the Duke, and the gentlemen
+from Topeka, who were included in the invitation.
+The excursion afforded a favourable opportunity of
+inspecting the city defences. From Alcatraz Fort,
+Point and Presidio Island batteries, which would not
+be considered very formidable as far as armament is
+concerned, although their position affords great advantages
+for torpedo defence, salutes were fired in
+honour of Sir Henry Green. But in the case of
+some of us the sight was marred by the rising sea,
+which increased to an inconvenient height as the
+steamer reached the Seal Rocks, close to the entrance
+to the bay. Of the seals I shall give an account
+farther on. They did not seem to mind the steamer
+very much until she blew her whistle, when many of
+them splashed into the sea. At the termination
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_48" id="Page_48">48</a></span>
+of the trip, which lasted some four hours, General
+McDowell entertained the party at his official quarters,
+which are beautifully situated on a bluff overhanging
+the water of the bay.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 9th.</i>&mdash;We spent, in some respects, an abortive
+and deceitful day; not, indeed, that there was anything
+disappointing about our entertainment at Belmont,
+under the auspices of ex-Senator Sharon; but that
+we started full of enterprise, and intent upon inspecting
+the great works of the Spring Valley Reservoir, and of
+making an excursion through what was described as a
+very beautiful county whence is brought the water
+supply of the great city in which we were sojourning.
+However, though we were baulked in the object of our
+expedition, the day passed, and not in the least degree
+unpleasantly, and instead of going to the Lakes we
+drove about the neighbourhood of Belmont, and visited
+several country seats.</p>
+
+<p>No one who visits San Francisco should omit taking
+an early opportunity of going to Palo-Alto to inspect
+the stock of General Stanford's thorough-breds, and the
+breeding establishment, which as a sample of perfect
+order and management cannot be surpassed. I cannot
+answer for the figures, but I was informed that the
+owner spends 25,000<i>l.</i> a year upon the maintenance of
+his stud and stables, and that he has not as yet sold a
+colt or filly, or parted with a single animal; sires,
+mares, and young brood now amounting to about 700
+head. They are beautifully housed in detached stables
+fitted up with every convenience that a horse of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_49" id="Page_49">49</a></span>
+highest pedigree and most luxurious taste can desire.
+I was particularly struck with the perfect silence
+which prevailed throughout the stables. No shouts to
+"stand over there," and none of that "&mdash;&mdash;" (groom's
+expletive) which is so common in our country. And
+partly owing perhaps to that mode of treatment, and to
+gentleness in handling, all the horses without exception
+seemed tractable and sweet-tempered. High-bred
+stallions stood out in the open for our inspection, and
+allowed themselves to be rubbed and felt without even
+laying down their ears or raising a hind-leg from the
+ground. In reply to a question respecting a remarkably
+beautiful animal, which seemed to have a little
+more fire in him, the head groom said "You may walk
+under his belly if you like," and then and there he told
+one of the grooms to do so, which the man did, without
+attracting any unusual degree of attention from the
+animal. Outside one of the large blocks of stables
+there is a kind of testing arena, in which we were told
+it was the pleasure of General Stanford, when he was
+at home, to sit watching the performance of his young
+horses. It is an ellipse, like a large circus, bordered
+with a hoarding, and in the centre there is a raised
+stage for the visitors, on which are revolving chairs.
+The riding-master, with an attendant, performing the
+functions of the late Mr. Widdicombe, sets the animal
+in motion, checking him when he breaks into a gallop.
+The speed at which the animal trots the ellipse is
+known by the time marked on a chronometer, and the
+fact is recorded for the information of the inspectors,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_50" id="Page_50">50</a></span>
+who can turn round their chairs and follow the action
+of the horse as it trots round the ring.</p>
+
+<p>The district of the State in which Palo-Alto is
+situated boasts of several residences of the Californian
+millionaires. One house which we visited, I think
+belonging to Mr. Flood, furnished the most ornate and
+beautiful examples of woodwork that were ever seen
+by any of the party. The house, which was as large
+as a good-sized English country mansion, is constructed
+of timber of the finest quality, beautifully worked,
+painted and varnished; and with moderate care a mansion
+of this kind will last, in this climate, a couple of
+hundred years, which to the American mind is an
+eternity. There were artists from New York, and the
+staff of an upholsterer and decorator of great renown
+from the Empire City were still busily engaged in the
+place as we went through the rooms. The magnificent
+halls, reception-rooms, billiard-rooms, library, bedrooms,
+all fitted up with extraordinary luxuriousness,
+but in a somewhat florid taste, were of wood, the doors
+of many of the apartments arresting attention by their
+extraordinary beauty and finish. The ceilings decorated
+in fresco by Italian artists, and bright windows filled
+with stained glass gave an appearance of light and
+grace to the whole residence. The kitchen arrangements
+were marvels of ingenuity, and one envied the butler
+who would have such a pantry as that which was displayed
+for our inspection. Some of the pictures which
+were ready to be placed on the walls were remarkable,
+however, only for the richness of their frames; and,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_51" id="Page_51">51</a></span>
+indeed, we heard that the excellent proprietor was not
+a man of very cultivated taste; a child of fortune, in
+the prime of life and of money-making, spending a
+portion of his enormous wealth with an easy hand, but
+destitute of what is called book-learning, and leaving
+to some future generation the cultivation of the graces
+and the acquirement of accomplishments which the
+circumstances of his early life had denied him to effect.</p>
+
+<p>It had been arranged that we should return to San
+Francisco to dinner, but Senator Sharon had in his
+secret heart resolved that we should do nothing of the
+kind, or at least, that if we did so, it should only be
+after we had partaken of such a feast at Belmont as
+would very much indispose us to test the capabilities
+of the <i>chef</i> of the Palace Hotel. From Palo-Alto accordingly
+we were driven to the charming country house,
+some miles away, of the ex-senator of Oregon, and we
+were regaled there, after some delay, at a very elaborate
+<i>déjeûner</i>, sent out from San Francisco. It was nigh
+8 o'clock ere we got back to the city; and the night
+ended by what might well be called "an excursion"
+to the Baldwin Theatre, which was at the time the
+most attractive of the places of entertainment of that
+sort open in the city. As some of us were walking
+back, after the play was over, with an American friend,
+talking of the "hoodlums," famous rowdies, who, we
+were assured, had been of late days utterly broken up
+by the vigilance of the police, our attention was attracted
+to a number of lads smoking at the corner of the street.
+Our friend said "Hoodlums broken up! There they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_52" id="Page_52">52</a></span>
+are&mdash;don't you believe it. That's a lot of them, and
+if you were alone you might find out very unpleasantly
+that there are plenty of them."</p>
+
+<p>The San Francisco journalists possess astonishing
+powers of imagination. I rubbed my eyes when I read
+that I had described "with eloquence the similarity
+between a marsh at San Bruno and a patch of jungle
+in the north-west of Scinde, where I had the felicity
+of spending three weeks with General Green while
+the natives were arranging a plan to capture the
+party and cut our throats." I never was in the north-west
+of Scinde in my life, and, although I had the
+pleasure of passing a longer time in his company in
+the United States, and of being on the same plateau
+before Sebastopol when he was there, for a still longer
+period, many years before, I never spent three weeks
+there with General Green. The Duke was described
+as "professing, but showing, little enthusiasm." However,
+these matters are of very slight interest or
+importance; only one wonders how many of the readers
+of this sort of literary work believe in it. One of our
+party has, according to a local paper, become a clergyman,
+and now rejoices in the style and title of "the
+Bishop," by which he is universally addressed by the
+party.</p>
+
+<p>While in the train, on our way to Belmont, I had
+the pleasure of being introduced to a gentleman
+who, although a lawyer in very large practice, is
+General of the State Volunteers; and in the course
+of conversation, I heard that he had papers containing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_53" id="Page_53">53</a></span>
+the statement of a gentleman who had visited, and
+which convinced him that the real Roger Tichborne
+was living not very far from San Francisco. General
+Barnes, whose name and character stand high in the
+city of the Golden Gate, and whom I found to be a
+gentleman of great intelligence, seemed perfectly
+satisfied by the story told by this new "claimant";
+but what he mentioned to me did not at all tend
+to create in my mind any notion that he was not an
+impostor, and especially were my doubts confirmed by
+the quotations which General Barnes made from some
+of the narrative, in which there was a ridiculous jumble
+of French and English, in order to justify, apparently,
+the stress placed by the "claimant" in his story on
+that part of his life which was passed in France. He
+spoke of his uncle as "mon oncle," and of Thursday as
+"Jeudi," and so on. However, General Barnes appeared
+to be so impressed by the truthfulness of the man's
+bearing, and by the full details he gave him at an
+audience in which he supplied the facts for the
+consecutive narrative which I was promised, that I
+expressed a desire to read it. General Barnes subsequently
+sent me a long written paper containing the
+heads of the claimant's story, a perusal of which
+strengthened the conviction I had previously entertained.
+I only mention this circumstance because
+there was a report spread throughout the Press, by the
+agency of one of the great telegraphic associations
+which furnish the American public with intelligence,
+that the Duke of Sutherland and myself had interviewed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_54" id="Page_54">54</a></span>
+the real Roger Tichborne at San Francisco, and
+had satisfied ourselves that he was the man; and
+innumerable "headings" were invented for this supposed
+interview, of which I was soon made aware on
+my return westward in every newspaper that I read.
+I promptly denied the statement that the Duke or
+myself had seen the new claimant, and although the
+denial appeared in print I was exasperated day after
+day by being asked questions afterwards with regard
+to this supposed conversation with Tichborne at San
+Francisco, and by inquiries as to my real impression;
+so it would appear that no one had seen or paid any
+attention to the refutation of the story which had
+brought down on my devoted head communications
+from friends of other Tichbornes, of whom there are
+several living, some in poverty and others in comparative
+affluence, in various cities and districts of the United
+States. I had further the mortification of seeing it
+stated in print that I had used disparaging words in
+alluding to the credulity of General Barnes, which was
+an entirely baseless fabrication. With all the extraordinary
+keenness of the American mind generally,
+there is associated with it a considerable amount of the
+Anglo-Saxon quality which is termed "gullibility,"
+and the land swarms with impostors who make a living
+out of the easy faith of the population. I do not speak
+merely of spiritualists, quacks, and professors of peculiar
+religions or medical dogmas, nor of the preachers
+of eccentric forms of faith or unbelief, but of the
+mass of persons who contrive to get an existence by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_55" id="Page_55">55</a></span>
+representing that they are "someone else." Although
+their tricks are well known, the trade still flourishes.
+They are always the "sons of peers," who have got
+into disgrace with their families, but who will eventually
+be owners of castles of historic fame and of enormous
+estates; "distinguished soldiers"; "Maids of Honour
+to the Queen," who for some unknown reasons are
+living in small out-of-the-way villages in the West;
+or political conspirators who have played a great part
+on some distinguished stage and have saved themselves
+from the consequences of defeated enterprize by
+taking refuge in the States. And then there are
+hordes of persons who are known by the title of "confidence
+men," who travel about on the trains or in the
+steamers, looking out for victims, or lounging about
+the bars and saloons, waiting for their prey in the shape
+of some facile and easy-eared stranger, who in consideration
+of their merits and distress shall give them
+temporary assistance. Sometimes, doubtless, there are
+cases of very real suffering, sorrow, and poverty, to
+which exile in the United States affords a melancholy
+refuge. I was obliged to hear in one great city of a
+gallant soldier who, reduced to poverty by no fault of
+his own, had quitted England and given up the
+society of his friends, and lived in a small suburb of
+a town on the coast of the Pacific, his secret known
+only to one or two officials, shunning all contact with
+his countrymen and evading as far as possible all
+inquiries of his friends. In San Francisco, where
+there is a poor-house open to strangers and to native-born
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">56</a></span>
+Americans alike, there are, I am told, to be met
+with extraordinary exemplifications of the "downs"
+of fortune. Adventurous and daring spirits, and pioneers
+of civilisation, at one time probably possessed
+of wealth which was wasted in dissipation, or lost in
+unfortunate speculations, are there, talking of the days
+that are gone, in all languages of the world, and awaiting
+their end; while others who started with them in
+the same race are building their palaces or revelling in
+the enjoyment of wealth, compared to which our
+greatest fortunes are, if figures can be trusted, a mere
+bagatelle. How rapidly some of these fortunes can be
+made was illustrated by numerous stories connected
+with some of the richest men in California. I was told
+by an eminent tradesman of San Francisco that one
+day a miner came into his establishment to buy a
+watch, which he said must be cheap and good, for he
+wanted something he could trust to in the matter of
+time, as he was going off with a party on an exploring
+expedition after gold. This was in the early time of
+the great "booms" in the West. He selected a watch,
+for which he paid $40, and departed. The following
+day he appeared in the shop and asked to see
+the proprietor, and then, producing the watch, he said
+he would like to have $30 for it, as he had lost all his
+money in a "spree" the night before and must have
+something to start with. The jeweller said, "Well, I
+will return you what you gave me for the watch, as it
+has suffered no harm, and you shall have your $40
+back again." The man went away exceedingly rejoiced,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">57</a></span>
+and the incident was forgotten. Some eighteen months
+afterwards a man came to the establishment, and looking
+at rings, gold chains, and jewellery of the most
+costly character, and asking for the best of everything
+that they had got, gave orders which occasioned the
+attendant to have some doubts as to his sanity, or
+certainly as to the means he had of paying the amount,
+which was rapidly running up to tens of thousands of
+dollars. So he sought out his principal. The strange
+customer said, "I suppose you don't know me?"
+which was admitted to be the case. He went on buying
+all the same, making the remark, "You need not
+be uneasy about the money, for So-and-so (the bankers)
+will tell you I am all right, and when you send the
+things home you shall be paid. I am Joe Smith, from
+whom some time ago you took a watch he bought from
+you when he came to your store, and gave him the
+full value for it when he was in want of money," and
+so departed, having shown his gratitude by buying
+6000<i>l.</i> worth of jewellery. This worthy miner is now
+one of the wealthy pillars of the State.</p>
+
+<p>The Chinese quarter of San Francisco has been
+described, I will not say <i>ad nauseam</i>, but as often
+as any book has been written which contains an account
+of a visit to the city of the Golden Gate. Of
+course we went there, and saw all that was to be seen
+under the best possible auspices, for Mr. Bee, whom
+I have already mentioned, was our guide and companion,
+assisted by an exceedingly intelligent officer
+of the police force; and on the occasion of our second
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">58</a></span>
+visit, when we went to the theatre, we had the advantage
+of being under the protection of the gentleman
+who represents law and order, on behalf of the
+municipality, in connection with the Chinese population
+and the arrangements for theatrical performances.</p>
+
+<p>The inspection of the dreadful den in which the
+opium-smokers were to be seen suggested to my mind
+a train of thought in connection with the traffic which
+I would not willingly have communicated to my
+American friends. It will seem incredible some day
+to the awakened conscience of the nation that we
+should have ever sanctioned such a frightful crime
+as the opium traffic. "It only poisons about two
+millions of people," is the excuse, "and brings in one-sixth
+of the whole revenue of India." If ever it were
+justifiable to utter the exclamation "Perish India!"
+it would be, I believe, in regard to that disgraceful
+source of revenue, and the necessity that is imposed
+upon us, as it is alleged, to raise it, in order to maintain
+the government of our Indian empire. Here in
+San Francisco the State has nothing to do with the
+sale of the poison, and it is very questionable whether
+the police regulations should not be applied to it, just
+as they are to persons who have tried to commit
+suicide, or to the inebriates in public-houses, or to
+places where intemperance is carried on to an extent
+injurious to the public peace. Death is the inevitable
+result of continued indulgence in opium-smoking,
+although it is true that in some cases the victim
+lingers on a few years, utterly indifferent to all the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">59</a></span>
+business of life except the one&mdash;the means of supplying
+himself with his only source of enjoyment. I was
+in one of the shops where they sell the drug, and was
+much struck by the cadaverous, sunken faces of the
+unfortunate customers, with bright dreamy eyes,
+trembling limbs, and wasted bodies, who came in to
+buy it. It is cheap enough, in all conscience, as a
+very small quantity suffices to produce what is called
+"the desired effect"; but for its bulk it is exceedingly
+dear, and indulgence in it must consume a
+considerable amount of the earnings of the best-paid
+artisans when they are no longer able to earn sufficient
+to keep them with a full supply. "Then," as our informant
+says, "they will commit any crime to get it."</p>
+
+<p>The general impression made upon me by the appearance
+of the Chinese population was most favourable.
+I do not now speak of what one might see in
+going through the haunts where the police regulations
+assign exclusive possession to certain classes
+of the population, which, sooth to say, seemed numerous
+enough; I refer to the business quarters, and to
+the crowds of cleanly, intelligent, well-behaved people
+of both sexes in the streets. General McDowell, and
+many other persons, for whose opinion the greatest
+respect must be entertained, look with apprehension
+on the effect of the Chinese immigration, and
+have, indeed, declared that it will destroy the Union
+if it be not checked; and these apprehensions are
+based upon the possibility that in time millions on
+millions of the swarming population of China will
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">60</a></span>
+inundate the United States, gradually overrun town
+after town, usurping all the fields of labour, and beating
+down the white man to the greatest misery by
+competition in every branch of trade, industry, and
+labour. This party has successfully, I believe, impressed
+its views upon a considerable number of
+senators and representatives in the Eastern States,
+who can exercise pressure on the Supreme Government;
+and the treaty recently signed between the
+Republic and China contains provisions which enable
+the authorities at the western seaports to exercise
+considerable control over the current of emigration.
+But, on the other hand, it is alleged that the fears
+which are expressed of a rapidly increasing exodus of
+Chinese from China, and an anabasis into the United
+States, are purely imaginary&mdash;in fact, unreal and pretentious.
+The pro-Chinese party allege that the
+emigration comes from only one port in one province,
+and that you may go all over the West, and ask any
+Chinaman or Chinawoman where he or she comes
+from, and you are met with the invariable answer,
+from the one port. The friends of the Chinese&mdash;arguing,
+moreover, that the State at large is benefited enormously
+by the accession to its resources from the Celestial
+Empire, and that the labour was attacked, not
+because it was cheap, but because it was good; that it
+is now indispensable, for without Chinamen and Chinawomen
+it would be almost impossible to carry on the
+ordinary life of these cities&mdash;allege that the agitation
+which has been so violent in San Francisco is mainly
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">61</a></span>
+encouraged by those who want to secure the Irish vote.
+Colonel Bee represents these views very strongly. He
+argues that Canton, not larger than the State of New
+Hampshire, is the sole source of emigration. He insists
+on it that there are no more than 100,000 Chinese in
+the whole of the Union, and that for the last ten years
+the emigrants have not sufficed to fill the places of
+those who had gone home with money, never intending
+to return, or who had died. He maintains, indeed, that
+the Chinese are decreasing rather than otherwise; and
+with all the power of figures, which he has at his
+fingers' ends as Consul, demonstrates that a very large
+proportion of the Chinese who are entered as arriving
+at San Francisco and other parts are the same men and
+women as those who came some years previously and
+went back to their native country, returning to gain
+more dollars.</p>
+
+<p>The principal enemies of the Chinese are the Irish,
+who, having monopolised the whole of the work of
+bricklayers, plasterers, carters, porters, and general
+labourers until their arrival, have been forced to
+reduce their rates of labour steadily by the competition
+of the Chinaman.</p>
+
+<p>The part of the population of San Francisco denominated
+the Sand lot, and especially those connected with
+the political associations of the city, do not by any
+means share Colonel Bee's views; but the agitation is
+dying out, and the meetings, which were of weekly
+occurrence, to excite the people against the Mongolians
+have decreased in number, importance, and interest.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">62</a></span>
+The directors of public companies, and the contractors
+for public works, are all in favour of the Chinese
+workman, who is sober, industrious, and orderly; and
+although the trade combinations among them are
+exceedingly subtle, and their powers of association
+for trade purposes remarkable, being moreover the
+most ancient in the world, the Chinese in the Western
+States have not as yet taken to indulge in the
+luxury of strikes. As domestic servants, nurses, and
+attendants on children, they appear to be affectionate
+and careful; and nothing could be better than the
+service of the hotel in which we were lodged, the great
+portion of which was carried on by Chinamen and
+women.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 10th.</i>&mdash;In the spacious courtyard of the Palace
+Hotel, at 7 o'clock this morning, there might have
+been observed three well-appointed waggons (as
+Americans call the vehicle more appropriately termed
+"spider" at the Cape), each with two horses of race,
+fast trotters, panting for a spin through the city and
+the Park out to the shores of the Pacific. The Duke
+and Sir H. Green and Mr. Stephen were driven by Mr.
+Howard. Mr. Wright was "personally conducted"
+by Mr. &mdash;&mdash;, and I was put behind a pair of as
+handsome chestnuts as could well be seen anywhere, of
+which the owner and driver (General Barnes) was very
+reasonably proud. The streets of San Francisco, like
+those of most of the American cities we have visited,
+are atrociously paved; the torture of driving over
+boulders is aggravated by the sharp ribs of the tram ways,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">63</a></span>
+so that it is not pleasant, if, indeed, it be
+possible, to drive rapidly till the limit of municipal
+incompetence or fraud be passed. But once out on the
+suburbs the chestnuts were invited to step it, and were
+bowling along at a good fourteen miles an hour on our
+way to the Park, over as good a road as horse or man
+ever felt under hoof or foot. The Park not long ago
+was a waste of sand, it is now swarded and planted with
+shrubs, and luxuriant with flowers. Notices that it
+was unlawful to do more than ten miles an hour were
+posted up, but the General did not pay strict attention
+to them till he came near shady places, where experience
+warned him that policemen might be lying
+privily in ambush. The pace was quickened till the
+waggon seemed to fly through the air rather than
+move over the ground. It was the perfection of
+travelling on wheels&mdash;almost as buoyant as a headlong
+gallop. The waggon weighed but 180 lb., the powerful
+animals "scarcely felt it more than their tails."
+I had a turn at the reins by "kind permission" of the
+General. The art of driving trotters needs practice.
+You must keep a strong, steady pull on the head, or
+they "break." Very soon I had the satisfaction of
+making the chestnuts break the law with a vengeance,
+and of hearing the General say, "We are just within
+the three minutes! not ten seconds inside it!"&mdash;that
+is, of trotting at the rate of just twenty miles an hour.
+Up hill and down hill, and along the flat out of the
+Park and over the smooth road, and in half an hour
+the Pacific was in sight, and the murmurs of the surf
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">64</a></span>
+rose above the rhythm of the regular beat of the eight
+hoofs in front of us! Cliff House was in view. Seal
+Rocks, in their setting of foam, lay before us, and in
+forty minutes from the time we left the hotel, despite
+policemen, miles of bad pavements, and tramways, we
+drew up at the steps of Cliff House, nine miles from
+San Francisco, and the trotters had not turned a hair.
+From the verandah at the sea front of the hotel, we
+enjoyed for half an hour a spectacle which is, as far as
+I know, unique. At the distance of 500 or 600 yards
+from the beach at our feet there is a group of four
+very rugged rocks, with serrated edges and tops, the
+sides broken here and there into ledges and small platforms.
+They are too small to be called islands, the
+largest being, as it seemed, not 100 yards wide. The
+slopes are not, I think, so steep as they looked on
+the land side. On the two largest of these rocks there
+were herds of sea-lions, so close that we could see,
+through very poor opera-glasses, with the greatest ease,
+their eyes, teeth, and whiskers, as they reposed or played
+with each other. Some had clambered to the highest
+ledges, escalading the sides by a series of painful-looking
+struggles with their flappers; others were fast
+asleep in cosy nooks; some were tossing their heads
+about and making believe to bite each other in sport;
+the younger ones were bent on teasing their fathers
+and mothers by uncouth gambols. As they played or
+moved they uttered cries between a bark and a roar;
+now and then the noise was like that of a pack of
+hounds in full cry, and the effect of the strange sound
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">65</a></span>
+mingling with the tumult of the surf and the beat of
+the waves was most singular and "eldrich." Those
+fresh from the sea were shining black, but became
+lighter as they dried. The older ones were not darker
+than cinnamon bears or unwashed sheep. As many of
+those on the rocks had not long left the water the
+general effect of the herd put one in mind of a gathering
+of enormous slugs on cabbages&mdash;not a poetic simile,
+but a just one, I think. Occasionally a sea-lion, hungry
+or bored by his companions, threw himself with a
+splash into the wave, and it was interesting to watch
+the rapidity and actual grace of his movements in the
+sea compared with his laborious efforts on the land.
+One could see them quite clearly through the body of
+the heavy billows; occasionally a bold one would glide
+close on shore and fish in the edge of the surf, raising
+his head and shoulders clear above the surface, and
+then diving out of sight. They were cruising about
+in every direction. You remember the sea-lion at the
+Zoo, of which the French attendant was so fond?
+Well, the creatures below and before us were most of
+them double the size of that fellow, and several exceeded
+the largest ox in size. The monsters are quite
+well known; one is named Ben Butler, "because he
+is such a great beast." They were formerly protected
+by law, but some one thought they killed too many
+fish, and the law was repealed. They are safe all the
+same, for there is a law against the discharge of firearms
+within 300 yards of an inhabited dwelling; Cliff
+House throws its ægis over the sea-lions in that wise;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">66</a></span>
+but the quantity of fish which must be devoured by
+these mountainous phocæ (an they be so) daily would
+maintain a decently-sized city. The hide furnishes the
+"sealskin" used to cover trunks, and the body yields
+oil fat, and the tusks are close, white, and hard. These
+sea-lions breed far away up north, and come with their
+young regularly every year to the same resorts; but
+incessant war is waged upon them by the sealers and
+whalers, so that the chances are against the beast
+where he is not protected by law, and their numbers
+do not increase. Altogether, the spectacle was one
+never to be forgotten. A hotel, with oysters awaiting
+us for a forebreakfast refection in the background,
+waggons from Michigan, horses from Kentucky, all the
+apparatus of civilised life close at hand, the Pacific
+and its strange wild denizens at our feet! "Let us
+turn in and have an oyster." "What! oysters in
+June?" "Yes, and good ones too." In this favoured
+land oysters are in season all the year round. There are
+no oysters found on the coast, I am told, and they will
+not breed. They are brought all the way from the
+Atlantic coast when they are mere oysterlets, and they
+are laid down in the Pacific, where they grow fat and
+large, but are not "crossed in love," and therefore are
+fit to be eaten from January to January. They are
+about the size of a spring chicken, and need some
+courage on the part of an assailant who desires to
+dispose of them as he would a native.</p>
+
+<p>This was our last day in the city of the Golden Gate,
+and the photographers were masters of the situation;
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">67</a></span>
+and there was much <i>débris</i> of sight-seeing to sweep up&mdash;visits
+to be made, shops to be inspected, among
+which I must mention specially the Diamond Palace
+of Colonel Andrews, one of the handsomest jeweller's
+"stores" in the world, though it is not as large as the
+establishments of the principal firms in London, Paris,
+Vienna, or as Tiffany's in New York. The distinctive
+feature of the interior is the decoration of the paintings
+of fair women, on the ceiling and the walls above the
+cases, by necklaces, diadems, zones, and other feminine
+ornaments of real diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and
+pearls. The pictures are the work of an Italian artist
+of merit, and the general effect is very striking; but I
+doubt whether it is a good way of inducing people to
+buy the articles which bedeck the ideal beauties. At
+Bradley and Rulofson's we saw photographs of many
+of our friends, and had one more proof of the smallness
+of the world. Every one we knew seemed to have
+visited San Francisco. There we all submitted to
+inevitable fate, and left our negatives behind us, but
+the Duke was captured by a rival photographic institution,
+and had a sitting all to himself.</p>
+
+<p>The aspect of a crowd in a large American city
+differs from that of the passers-by in the street of an
+English town, most of all in the appearance of such
+a large proportion of coloured people. Here it may be
+said, however, that they are colourless, as the prevailing
+hue of the foreign population is that of the Chinaman.
+In Canada the number of negroes, or of persons
+of negro descent, of varying gradations of colour, is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">68</a></span>
+remarkable, considering the circumstances, but they
+probably may be accounted for by the emigration in
+the olden times of those who were escaping from
+slavery, or who went with their masters and employers
+into the Dominion. In the cities on the Lakes I was
+very much struck by the persons of undoubted African
+descent who are to be met with in the streets in great
+numbers; and in Chicago there is a quarter nearly
+exclusively occupied by them&mdash;honest, industrious,
+hard-working people seemingly, given to stand about
+at the street corners, however, a good deal on Sundays,
+and cultivating a bright attire, especially on the
+part of the ladies, whose bonnets and shawls were
+things to wonder at. There are loafers amongst them,
+as there are amongst their betters; but, taking them
+all in all, in the Northern, Western, and Atlantic
+States, they are a decidedly useful element in the
+population, easing the burden of labour to the white
+man, and following many occupations, such as those of
+waiters, barbers, bricklayers, and labourers in the less
+skilled sort of work, for which it would be difficult to
+find American substitutes. One peculiarity, which
+may be accounted for by some wiser person than
+myself, seems to be their recklessness as to what
+they put on their heads. Whether it is merely a
+compliance with the custom of the white man, which
+impels them to cover the highly effective protection
+against sun and cold which Nature has given them, or
+not; or whether it is that the canons of taste in such
+matters have not yet settled down to those accepted by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">69</a></span>
+people in civilised life in the Western world, the male
+negro has the most extraordinary indifference as to
+the quality and shape of the thing which he calls a
+hat or cap, and it would not be easy to find out of the
+gutters of some Irish country town anything more
+dilapidated, battered, and utterly incoherent than
+some of the hats which one may see on the heads of
+people of colour, especially down South. Whatever
+other virtues they may have, neatness is not amongst
+them; for, with all their affectation of finery, their
+clothes are generally ill-kept, their houses are unkempt,
+and, where they are cultivators of the soil, the
+operations are performed in a slovenly manner. The
+traditions of the old plantation have descended upon
+them, and influence them.</p>
+
+<p>On my way from Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the
+bankers in Montgomery Street&mdash;I believe the former
+of these gentlemen has had the privilege of giving
+his name to steamers and cities, leastways railway
+stations&mdash;I saw a party of sailors belonging to the
+United States steamer "<i>Rodgers</i>," now about to proceed
+in search of the "<i>Jeannette</i>," and I was much
+struck by their resemblance to our own bluejackets
+in general "cut of the jib," dress, face, and figure.
+They were in charge of a smart-looking officer, and
+had been paying a farewell visit to the fruit and
+vegetable markets&mdash;one of the sights of the city.
+They were in high good-humour, laughing and chatting
+loudly, more than is the wont of Americans,
+and I could not but contrast their fine physique with
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">70</a></span>
+that of the soldiers we had seen at Sir Henry Green's
+parade when General McDowell took us round the
+harbour. The detachment at the Fort, consisting of
+infantry and artillerymen, and squads of different
+regiments, had some weedy veterans in the ranks,
+who had lost their setting up and did not look fit
+for much work; but the sailors, probably a picked
+lot, were good all round.</p>
+
+<p><i>À propos</i> of Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the number
+of wealthy men in San Francisco of Irish origin or
+nationality is remarkable. Millionaires with names of
+Milesian prefixes and terminations are phenomenal.
+We had intended to return to the East Coast by way
+of Utah, and to stay a day or two at Salt Lake City,
+but the railroad company did not consider it expedient
+to give the party the facilities which had been accorded
+in every other instance by the American authorities to
+the Duke and his friends. To have gone round Salt
+Lake City would have cost a couple of hundred pounds
+more for haulage, and we were much more interested
+in seeing Leadville and Denver than the City of the
+Mormons; the game was not thought to be worth
+the candle, and it was resolved that we would go back
+as we came, in charge of the representatives of the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fé Railroad Company.
+It was only one item more in the long list of things
+we ought to have seen if we could, and I can safely say
+that we had a large share of the common experience of
+travellers in regard to the relations between the possible
+and the impossible in the course of a journey in a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">71</a></span>
+strange land, where there are for ever cropping up
+representations that "you really ought not to leave
+without seeing" so and so. The evening of our last day
+was passed in the society of General McDowell, Mr.
+Morgan, the English Consul, Colonel Bee, and others,
+who had done so much to make the visit to San Francisco
+all that could be desired, and whose courtesy
+and kindness will ever be remembered by every one
+of us most gratefully. Like Sir Charles Coldstream,
+we "had seen everything, done everything," but,
+unlike him, had found there was plenty in it. The
+street railway&mdash;most ingenious and successful, invaluable
+in a hilly city like Lisbon&mdash;the Chinese
+Theatre, the Joss houses&mdash;shops, eating-houses, opium
+dens of the Chinese quarter, the clubs, the principal
+buildings, the streets, the shops, the markets, the
+harbour, the suburbs, and country round about&mdash;all
+had been inspected, and yet each day we were told
+that we were doing positive injustice to ourselves
+and to the objects which were perforce neglected.
+In the morning there was a levée in the hotel to
+bid the Duke good-bye and see the party start on
+their return journey. At the very last moment
+a gentleman came forward with a proposal to take
+us to the North Pole by balloon, but there was not
+time to consider it in all its bearings and the offer
+was declined with thanks. We started at 10 <span class="s08">A.M.</span>,
+and the Duke was attended to the boat and to the
+station across the water by a large body of San
+Franciscans, who took leave ere the train started.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_72" id="Page_72">72</a></span>
+The gentlemen who were with us on the journey
+westwards attended the Duke on his way towards
+the Eastern States. All day we travelled through
+California&mdash;"the hot furnace"&mdash;which at first, however,
+proved to be only very warm, and the coloured
+servants had constant supplies of iced compounds to
+be drunk for the solace of the homeward bound, and
+had laid in a stock of San Franciscan luxuries to
+soothe the way.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_73" id="Page_73">73</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IV.<br />
+CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Los Angeles&mdash;Mud-geysers&mdash;"Billy the Kid"&mdash;General Fremont&mdash;Manitou,
+the Garden of the Gods&mdash;Desperadoes&mdash;Bob Ingersoll&mdash;Denver
+City&mdash;Leadville&mdash;Grand Cañon.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>June 12th.</i>&mdash;The train stopped at Los Angeles at six
+in the morning, and, drawing up my window-blind, the
+first person I saw on the platform was our good friend
+Colonel Baker, who had come to meet us, intent on the
+good offices which he could render during our stay.
+These were exhibited in the form of a beautiful bouquet
+for Lady Green, baskets of limes and oranges, and
+great bunches of grapes. In this happy valley there
+are cares as in the rest of the world. The Colonel
+told us he was in the midst of a great litigation
+affecting his claim to a large tract of land in which
+there are said to exist the richest tin-mines in the
+American Continent. Yet why should he care about
+his tin-mine? There were rolling acres rich with
+corn and fruit, and there were flocks and herds and
+vineyards, and a charming home of his own. Nevertheless,
+if the want of that tin-mine made him at all
+unhappy, I am sure those who were indebted to him,
+as we were, for so many kindnesses, will wish his claim
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_74" id="Page_74">74</a></span>
+to be triumphantly asserted, and long possession of all
+that is to follow.</p>
+
+<p>I dreaded the passage of the Desert to Yuma; and
+indeed the heat was intense. No wonder that with
+the thermometer ranging from 100° to 104°, all the
+blinds in the car were pulled down, and we sprawled
+listlessly on the cushions. Our excellent attendants
+put forth all the resources of art in the shape of ice
+and preparations of limes and cocktails; but the temperature
+would not be baffled. We could just read,
+and were aware that we were living, and some of us had
+strength enough now and then to execute forays against
+flies with napkins to drive them out of the carriages.
+How could people live out in the open, and work in
+the mines, or pursue any out-of-door employment in
+such torrid heat? Nevertheless, there was a marked
+distinction between it and the heat to be endured with
+the mercury at an equal height in India.</p>
+
+<p>The speed of the train was very respectable&mdash;somewhat
+over twenty miles an hour&mdash;and at that rate
+we ran from San Gorgonio and Banning on to
+Cabazon, through a flat plain, dry and burnt up, very
+like the desert around Suez, and fringed, like it, with
+rocky and rugged hills, save that there was a great
+growth of Spanish bayonets and cactuses of all kinds
+among the stones and sand, and that snow was to be
+seen on all the hill-tops in the distance. For 107
+miles there was no water to be met with going along
+this plain; but the mirage, of which I have spoken in
+the account of our journey to San Francisco, was
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_75" id="Page_75">75</a></span>
+frequent and beautiful; and again I was fascinated by
+the sight of lovely lakes embowered in trees, with
+stately cities on their shores, changing and shifting
+and melting away, only again to assume apparent
+substance to cheat the senses.</p>
+
+<p>Once the train stopped to allow the passengers to
+visit the mud-geysers, which were not more than
+150 yards on the left of the line, and with commendable
+curiosity most of us got out and walked over
+the baked earth to the spot. There was no mark
+whatever of smoke or vapour to indicate the place;
+and it was almost startling to come suddenly upon a
+kind of pond of semi-liquid mud, fifty or sixty feet
+in diameter, on which huge bubbles, varying in size
+from an orange to a hogshead, were continually forming
+and bursting. There was a faint sulphurous smell,
+and the ground around the liquefied portion of the
+surface, where the bubbles were breaking, was hot and
+cracked. The conductor said that all attempts to
+reach the bottom of the holes through which the
+bubbles arose had failed. Two of these geysers were in
+active operation, and the plain away to the left of the
+rail was said to contain a great number of them. After
+all it was very unsatisfactory to see this ebullition
+going on without being able to account for it; and,
+generally, I think we thought less of each other and of
+our information after visiting them, and finding out
+that not one of us had any theory on the subject which
+would bear either fire or water.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think I ever saw a sunset more beautiful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_76" id="Page_76">76</a></span>
+than that which marked the close of this day&mdash;certainly
+not in India or South Africa, nor on the
+prairie, for which they make claims of surpassing
+beauty in the matter of sunsets. As it died out, I
+felt that "thing of beauty" could not "be a joy for
+ever," for it was a combination of colour and of form,
+including sky and mountain, that it would be impossible
+to see again.</p>
+
+<p>The kindness of which we have had so many
+proofs, has followed, accompanied, and preceded us
+all unremittingly and unweariedly. A rough with
+some Bourbon on board mounted to-day the steps
+of the car at a station, and insisted on seeing "this
+Duke." When he was told that the object of his
+attention was engaged, he said, "This is a land of
+liberty (as in his case it was), and he doesn't want a
+bodyguard with him!" But the conductor sent him
+away about his business without trouble. On the
+platform at Benson a few miners asked "the Duke to
+come out and show himself." The people at the stations
+were generally satisfied with a quiet peep; now and
+then an enthusiastic Scotchman claimed a shake hands,
+which was always accorded to him. A sleeper placed
+across the rails (accounted for by the officers on the
+hypothesis that some loafer without a ticket had been
+turned off by the conductor, and had put the sleeper in
+the way of the train to wreak his vengeance&mdash;a thing
+which has occurred nearer home) was the only substantial
+danger to which we were here exposed.</p>
+
+<p>The heat (June 13th) was intense. The thermometer
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_77" id="Page_77">77</a></span>
+rose to 105 at one o'clock in the day, and it was little
+comfort to us to be told that at Deming it had been up
+to 110 the day before.</p>
+
+<p>For some days we have been supping full of horrors,
+indeed breakfasting and dining on them, for the
+papers contain accounts of the extraordinary homicides
+all about this region. Tucson, Benson, Wilcox&mdash;all
+these places were resounding with the exploits of
+"Billy the Kid." Now at Tucson there is, I believe, a
+man whose name was once amongst the very foremost
+in the United States. Who some twenty years and
+more ago had not heard of General Fremont, "the
+Pathfinder," the adventurous traveller, the energetic
+politician, the dashing soldier? He had gone at the
+outbreak of the war to take up the chief command in
+the west with all the pomp and circumstance of glorious
+war. I was somewhat astonished to find that he was
+at Tucson, the governor of the Territory, on a humble
+salary, apparently the world-forgetting and the world-forgot,
+while "Billy-the-Kid" was perpetrating numberless
+atrocities under his nose, and Mr. Pat Garrett
+was dressing up his loins with his revolver-belt, and
+about to go forth with a chosen band of citizens and
+seek the redoubtable William.<a name="FNanchor_A" id="FNanchor_A" href="#Footnote_A" class="fnanchor">[A]</a></p>
+
+<p>A person who has only seen settled States in
+Europe, or the Eastern States of the North American
+Continent, cannot form any notion of a territory
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_78" id="Page_78">78</a></span>
+which has become a centre of attraction to all the
+wild adventurers and daring spirits which society,
+in the process of formation, throws out as a sort of
+advanced guard. In Arizona, in 1870, according to the
+American Almanac, out of a total population of 9658,
+2729 could not write and 2690 could not read. Of the
+total population, 2491 were foreign born, and 2753 were
+natives, the rest being coloured or under ten years of
+age. In New Mexico, out of 91,000 people, 48,000
+over ten years of age could not read, and 51,000 whites
+over ten years of age could not write. It may be
+inferred from such figures what is the general condition
+of the labouring classes in these States and Territories.
+The inhabitants of these States have doubled in the
+last ten years. They are filling up at a rate inconceivably
+great&mdash;so great, indeed, that American newspapers
+are fairly bewildered and American statesmen
+appalled by the rush across the Rocky Mountains
+and down the rivers, although as yet but a small
+proportion of the immense stream of immigrants
+has flooded the outlying territories. "At this rate,"
+exclaims a Western editor, "the old monarchies of
+Europe will soon be depopulated." When Mr. Lincoln,
+in 1861, addressed his inaugural to the expectant States
+he expressed his confident belief that there were children
+then born who would live to see the flag of the Union
+floating over no less than 100,000,000 of human beings.
+The recent census of the United States gives a return
+of 51,000,000 of people, but the most eminent statisticians
+have arrived at the belief that the progress
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_79" id="Page_79">79</a></span>
+and increase of the States will not be at the same
+rapid rate as that which marked the history of the
+Republic since the cessation of the great civil war.
+It may be fairly inferred, however, that at the end
+of this century the population of the United States
+will greatly exceed that of Russia, or that of any
+empire except China and Great Britain, including
+Hindostan. The population, on each period of ten
+years, has increased at an average of more than 30
+per cent.; in fact, nearer 33 per cent., and the centre
+of it has travelled westward at the rate of more than
+fifty miles every ten years, till the centre of population
+is now eight miles west by south from Cincinnati.
+In 1800 the Union extended over only 239,935 square
+miles. Its flag now floats over 1,272,239 square miles
+of States and over 1,800,000 square miles of Territory
+governed by the central power at Washington. "We
+cannot think," exclaims a Republican writer, "that
+the war of rebellion settled all our troubles and made
+us secure in our Republic. This enormous growth
+of the practically unknown West reveals to us the
+grave dangers that threaten our nation. We meet
+there the tremendous influences of alien races and alien
+religions." The Americans of New England and of the
+Eastern States do not feel anxious on that score,
+because their institutions are thoroughly founded,
+their character formed, and they trust to the great
+power of accomplished facts to assimilate the alien
+elements and sustain the fabric of the Republic. The
+bugbear of a great Chinese immigration has ceased to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_80" id="Page_80">80</a></span>
+practically influence Californian politics, and it may be
+safely assumed that the bulk of the future immigrants
+from the Celestial Empire will only come from the same
+sources as those which have hitherto supplied the stream.
+No wonder, however, that thoughtful Americans&mdash;and
+there are many who think of the future of their country
+as something quite apart from dollars&mdash;are filled with
+grave anxieties when they see such floods of purely
+foreign material, which will in all probability exercise a
+preponderating influence over the politics of the Great
+Republic, surging into the States. Particularly have
+the home missionary clergy, as they are styled, been
+struck by the enormous influence which this foreign
+immigration has exercised. According to one authority,
+the Rev. Mr. Stimson, of Worcester, "it is not a question
+of spreading any particular form of Christianity or
+of Church government, but a momentous struggle of
+American institutions with alien civilisations and religions
+for the control of the great Western country. The
+problem is not a matter of cleaning door-yards, but of
+saving a continent for freedom." The Chinese Question
+and the Indian Question are, they think, as nothing compared
+with the Irish Question and the German Question.
+"The Republic," we are told, "stands on a foundation as
+broad as humanity itself," whatever that may mean,
+"but its condition of existence is a universal regard for
+the interests of all." Often during the course of the
+Duke of Sutherland's excursion it was our good fortune
+to fall in with men of great political and social knowledge.
+The future of the Republic is, in the mind of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_81" id="Page_81">81</a></span>
+these men, clouded with uncertainty and doubt. They
+are apprehensive of some unknown danger. It may be
+corruption of political life leading to want of faith in
+free institutions; it may be the rival energies and the
+opposing interests which Washington foresaw as likely
+to array the East against the West&mdash;the Atlantic
+States against the inland States, and it is calculated by
+some sanguine people that before this century is over
+there will be eighteen, or possibly twenty, States
+admitted into the Union formed out of the Territories
+which are now under the central Government at
+Washington. Upon such influences as these alien
+immigration may be expected to act with prodigious
+power. At a recent meeting in Springfield a clergyman
+gave as an illustration of the absolute indifference
+of the foreign immigrants to Republican
+institutions a conversation he had with a Norwegian
+minister in Minneapolis. "There is nothing," said
+this gentleman, "in America which we Norwegians
+regard as of value except your land and your money.
+We do not want to learn English: we do not want to
+know the Americans around us; we have certainly no
+notion of becoming Americans, but we intend to remain
+as we are&mdash;Norwegians." The Mormons control Utah.
+They boast that they will soon govern five of the most
+important territorial regions beyond the Rockies. But
+if Utah becomes a State, as she hopes to do, she will
+found a Mormon code of laws and institutions beyond
+the power of the United States to control. New
+Mexico may be considered as a Roman Catholic State
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_82" id="Page_82">82</a></span>
+under the control of an excellent archbishop. Of course
+all prophecies may be falsified by events, but judging
+by the eighty years which have elapsed of the present
+century, and from the ratio of increase in that time in
+the United States, the most liberal construction may be
+placed even upon the bounding estimates of American
+politicians and statists. When we look to the Far West
+and see, for instance, how Winnipeg has become the centre
+of a great network of river navigation, 300 miles in one
+direction, 600 miles in another, and that the Mackenzie
+River passes for 1200 miles through what is declared to
+be the future wheat region of the world, we may easily
+comprehend the anxiety with which the patriotic American
+is filled lest the future of such a State should fall
+into hands antagonistic to the principles in which his
+<i>beau idéal</i> of government has been founded and has
+prospered.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 14.</i>&mdash;At Lamy, a station named after the good
+archbishop of Santa Fé, where we halted for a short
+time whilst the passengers of another train were
+breakfasting, a citizen came up to me on the platform
+and exclaimed, as if he were very much impressed by
+the news he was going to give, "If you look in there,
+sir, you will see Bob Ingersoll at breakfast!" I asked
+whether there was anything very remarkable about
+the fact. "Well, sir," he said, "he is Colonel Ingersoll,
+of whom you have heard. He is the most remarkable
+in-fidel in the United States, and I really think he
+believes what he preaches. A good man to look at,
+too, and, they say, first-rate in his family." I had a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_83" id="Page_83">83</a></span>
+glance at the believer in unbelief, and saw a very presentable-looking
+person, of fine appearance and good
+features, busily engaged in making the most of his
+time at one of the tables in the refreshment-room.
+He was the observed of all observers, and appeared to
+like it; and I understood from one of the crowd that
+he had just returned from inspecting some mining
+ventures in which he was concerned; for, if he does
+not believe in the world to come, he is credited with
+very strong faith in the excellencies of the possession
+of wealth in the world that is. His lectures are attended
+by crowded audiences, but, as an astute American
+observed, "they won't come to much, for, after all,
+people who do not believe anything can never get up a
+great enthusiasm. It is in believing something that
+the populace has faith."</p>
+
+<p>Once more our eyes were rejoiced with the sight of
+the lovely plains of Las Vegas, wide-spreading fields
+decked with flowers and dotted with flocks, bordered
+with ranges of softly contoured mountains, the courses
+of the water streams indicated by bright vegetation
+and by growth of trees of many kinds. From Lamy
+(170 miles) there is a gradual rise to Raton, which
+we reached at 6.30 in the evening. The appearance
+of the region we traverse as the train approaches
+the Raton Pass presents a strong contrast to the
+desolate country through which we have been passing.
+From Raton the train was drawn by two engines
+in front and shoved by one behind, and even then
+the pace was not very rapid, for the ascent is very
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_84" id="Page_84">84</a></span>
+sharp. All the more could we enjoy a very glorious
+sunset, as we slowly ascended the mountain. Then
+darkness came on rapidly, and we slid down towards
+La Junta into the night, and were all fast asleep long
+before we arrived there. In the very early morning, on
+June 15th, some two hours after midnight, we halted
+for a time at Pueblo. At 9 o'clock we had to leave
+our beloved Pullman and change the cars, for we were
+to take a fresh point of departure, starting from the
+Union Depôt upon the Denver and Rio Grande narrow-gauge
+railway for Denver, 119 miles distant, and making
+an excursion on the way to Manitou, to which we
+diverged from Colorado Springs: for to go within reach
+of that famous resort and not to see it would have been
+a great outrage on all the rules and regulations established
+for the observance of travellers. Certes narrow-gauge
+railways need an apology. Their <i>raison
+d'être</i> is, at the best, that they are better than nothing.
+"If you won't have us, you can have nothing else."
+And in such a mountainous region as we were about
+to visit, the difficulties and expense connected with a
+broad-gauge line would have been enormous, if indeed
+it could be constructed at all. The narrow-gauge
+carriages, with seats to match, with which we were
+made acquainted for the first time, were of course
+much less commodious and comfortable than those we
+had quitted, but far superior to those on the Indian
+lines of the same gauge, and Indian engineers had been
+over to take a lesson from the Americans for the use of
+their carriage-builders. Atchison, Topeka, and Santa
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_85" id="Page_85">85</a></span>
+Fé Company and Denver and Rio Grande Company
+have been at daggers drawn and pistols cocked&mdash;ay,
+and fired&mdash;and at battles waged, in times gone by;
+and now our friends on the former line were, like ourselves,
+the guests of the latter, which was represented
+by several official gentlemen anxious to do the honours
+to the Duke. The scenery becomes grander and wilder
+every mile as the special hurries on as well as it can
+over the sinuous line, which is piercing a mountain
+region savage and sterile, and climbing by the sides of
+ravines and creeping upwards in rocky valleys with pine-clad
+hill-tops and frowning cliffs above. The engineer
+who designed the line is a Scotchman named McMurtrie&mdash;or
+at least of recent Scotch origin&mdash;and he seems
+to have a special gift for such aspiring work, and a gradient-compelling
+genius not to be baffled by altitudes.
+We were mounting towards the snows. Range upon
+range of whitened summits and hoary ridges came in
+view, all paying homage to the rugged crown of Pike's
+Peak, which can be seen from points more than 140 miles
+away. The fleecy cloudland which seemed to lie before
+us, as we looked away from Pueblo, was resolving itself
+into savage alps. And in these passes, which the eye
+caught for a moment, there might be El Dorados still
+undiscovered, for around us were cities springing out
+of the desert. Here the enchanter's wand is the explorer's
+pick, and no one could say where the precious
+ore might not be awaiting its touch. We were coming
+to the Land of Promises. The conversation of our new
+friends, among whom were some gentlemen of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_86" id="Page_86">86</a></span>
+press, related mostly to mines, and one of them had,
+as we discovered, a very certain investment at the disposal
+of the Duke, in the form of a mining-claim, which
+was worth, at the lowest computation, twice as much
+as he was willing to take for it. There was no reason
+to doubt his good faith, but it was felt that it was a
+kind of fortune which ought not to pass into the hands
+of strangers, and should be reserved for the people of
+the country; and I am sure all of the party who had
+the pleasure of the owner's acquaintance hope that
+he has "made his pile" out of it, and has more than
+realised his expectations.</p>
+
+<p>Colorado Springs, forty-five miles from Pueblo, is
+nearly 6000 feet above the level of the sea. The
+character of the line to it is best described in the fact
+that the average grade per mile is 44·14, the maximum
+curvature 6°. There are "no Springs" here, but the
+little town, charmingly situated, is a halting-place much
+frequented in tourist-time by travellers, and reputed to
+be healthful. There are some pleasant houses visible
+from the station, at which we descended to take our
+places in the carriages provided to take us to Manitou
+Springs, five miles away. Mr. Palmer&mdash;if General, I
+beg his pardon&mdash;the President of the Railroad, had
+important business to attend to, but he was so well
+represented by Mr. Bell, the Vice-President, that no
+one regretted his absence, and it cannot be said in his
+case <i>les absents ont toujours tort</i>. He is reported to
+have made a very large fortune with much ingenuity,
+and to have business talents which even in this country
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_87" id="Page_87">87</a></span>
+excite admiration. Mr. Bell is an Irish gentleman, a
+member of the medical profession, who has a delightful
+villa embowered in a garden in the environs of Manitou,
+where the Duke and his friends found a charming
+interior and an Irish-American welcome, and discovered
+that strawberries and cream were almost as good in
+Colorado as in Covent Garden. A quaint, odd place,
+Manitou&mdash;an American Martigny, with Pike's Peak
+rising (14,300 feet above the sea) over it in the clear
+sky, inspiring regret that we could not make the excursion
+to the summit, which is rewarded, we were told,
+and I can believe, by one of the grandest views in the
+world&mdash;the usual service of guides, horses, and mules,
+and <i>calèches</i>&mdash;a naturalist's store with skins, minerals,
+feathers, and stuffed "objects"&mdash;detached wooden
+houses and villas in small plots of garden&mdash;a straggling
+street, and large hotels for invalids. But there was the
+unusual feature of encampments here and there by the
+roadside, and notices forbidding the pitching of tents
+within certain limits which were explained by the fact
+that the high reputation of the waters and air induces
+people to come from great distances for the treatment
+of consumption, and diseases of throat and lungs.
+Many of them find it cheaper to travel in horse waggons
+and pitch their canvas dwellings when they wish to
+make a halt, than to take up their quarters at hotels.
+Poor people! what pale, hectic cheeks and wasted
+forms we saw; little groups picnicking by the sides of
+the rivulets along the roads&mdash;each with a gnawing
+care&mdash;anxiety about some dear one's health in the midst
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_88" id="Page_88">88</a></span>
+of them. Our driver, an intelligent, chatty lad, was
+full of information, and we had to drive the prescribed
+road by the wells out to the Ute Pass, a mountain-gorge
+wild enough&mdash;a small <i>Tête Noire</i>&mdash;to points to
+which magniloquent names have been given.</p>
+
+<p>It is not for want of what is called puffing that
+Americans neglect the resorts of health of their own
+country, and in the States far and wide the beauties
+and advantages of Manitou are blazoned forth on the
+walls of hotels and in guide-books to all who can read.
+I may confess now that, notwithstanding the magnificent
+altitude of Pike's Peak, and the eccentric forms
+of the rocks in the "Garden of the Gods," I was disappointed
+with Manitou. But then the visit was
+short, and the day was hot, and the way was long and
+dusty, and haply it might be that under different
+circumstances Manitou would deserve much warmer
+praise. It possesses indeed an abundance of curious
+springs, said to be full of health-giving properties;
+and in the course of our drive we halted several times
+to partake of drinks from various springs, out of one
+of which bubbled up very good soda-water, precisely
+like Schweppe's best in taste and appearance.
+At the large hotel, which put one in mind of the great
+establishments of the same sort in Switzerland, the
+water served at table to the guests&mdash;a sort of pleasant
+Apollinaris-tasting beverage&mdash;came from a natural
+fountain.</p>
+
+<p>The "cataract" nearly made us angry, and there
+was no regret felt when the carriages returned to the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_89" id="Page_89">89</a></span>
+hotel, where there was unwonted activity and bustle,
+as the "Denver Zouaves" had just descended in a
+friendly razzia on it, and were desolating the hearts
+and fireside resources of Manitou. The consequences
+might have been serious, as it turned out, to unoffending
+strangers. Those who needed it turned into the barber's
+shop of the hotel to be shaved, and after some delay a
+coloured man appeared, who began to try his hand on
+me. Fortunately it was not 'prentice, for it was very
+unsteady, and I became a little alarmed for my cuticle.
+"It will be all right, mister," quoth the barber. "I
+never cut any one. But I'm demoralised, dat's a fact,
+having to wait on dem Denver Zouaves. Lor a messy
+on any enemy dey has! My nerve's all gone to pieces
+wid their wantin' everting at once at the dinner!"
+The hotel seemed far more clean and comfortable
+than the caravanserais in the land of William Tell;
+but our stay was short, for we were put under
+orders for a sight which has the most inappropriate
+name that could be invented&mdash;a valley in which the
+most extraordinary-looking columns carved out in a
+plateau by the agency of water, have been left standing,
+detached and in groups, to which the visitor
+enters through a cleft in a barrier of rock passing
+round the base of a pillar of sandstone as high as
+a house. The "Garden of the Gods" contains 500
+acres, and is surrounded by mountains and cliffs.
+The sandstone pillars generally taper from the base
+upwards to a short distance from the tops, which are
+flattened out or surmounted by slabs or blocks of sandstone
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_90" id="Page_90">90</a></span>
+of fantastic outline, and they are called by names
+derived from fancied likenesses to animals, birds,
+and men. The juxtaposition of the most brilliantly
+hued, dazzling-red blocks and strata, with masses of
+the same material of milky whiteness, gives the impression
+that the scene is the work of human hands;
+it seems too quaint and artificial for the hand of
+Nature, to which alone it is due; and the vegetation
+and the trees are in keeping with the character of the
+place. A trysting-place for geologists, and their happy
+hunting-ground, no doubt. But why "the Garden of
+the Gods," I pray?</p>
+
+<p>From the valley or cup, emerging by another
+road, the driver took us to a ravine-like recess,
+almost girt in by high wooded mountains, in which
+Mr. (General?) Palmer is erecting a mansion of palatial
+importance&mdash;a picturesque site surely&mdash;cliffs,
+forests, and mountain all around, and in view one most
+singular sandstone pillar, named the Major Domo,
+120 feet high and only 30 feet round&mdash;a mountain
+stream brawling through tangled brushwood glades&mdash;a
+garden. But the heat! That must prove a terror
+by day to the inmates of Glen Eyrie Lodge or Castle&mdash;which,
+by the by, was named, as one of us insisted,
+from a collection of rubbish on a ledge in the face of
+one of the cliffs, which was, he maintained, the nest of
+an eagle. It was now time to return to our train,
+and we were not sorry to get back to Colorado Springs.</p>
+
+<p>From Colorado Springs to our destination at Denver
+there were still 75 miles of rail, and the line continued
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_91" id="Page_91">91</a></span>
+to ascend till we reached Divide (7186 feet),
+whence there was a gentle descent. There were sixteen
+stations named on the time-table. We stopped
+at very few of them, and travelled somewhat too fast
+to permit our placid enjoyment of the scenery, austere
+and vast, which indeed deserved more attention than
+could be given to it by passengers in a very lively
+train&mdash;endless alps on alps, not sheeted with perpetual
+white, but rather flecked with snowfields, which contrasted
+finely with the sombre pine-forests, and the
+rich hues of the rocks, touched by the rays of the
+setting sun, that, ere it slid behind the mountains,
+cast a rose-coloured mantle on their summit. The
+evidences of a bustling city were not wanting in the
+approaches to the capital of Colorado. There were
+tall chimneys vomiting out smoke in the distance, and
+near at hand trains of waggons were toiling over the
+dusty plain&mdash;still 5000 feet above the sea-level&mdash;fast
+trotters and people on horseback, beer-gardens, factories
+of all kinds, brick-kilns, and then a fringe of
+log houses and wooden shanties, before the train
+stopped at the imposing and substantial depot.</p>
+
+<p>It was a quarter-past eight, nearly dark, when
+we reached Denver, and glad were we to get into
+the hall of the Windsor Hotel, which was crowded
+with a mixed multitude&mdash;miners, and speculators, and
+traders, and some travellers like ourselves&mdash;a very busy
+scene indeed. In the hotel were all human comforts
+nearly; hot and cold baths, and good rooms, and more
+appliances of civilised existence, for those who could
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_92" id="Page_92">92</a></span>
+pay for them, than could be found in many hostelries
+of approved reputation in venerable towns at home;
+moreover, exuberant offers of help and information.
+One goes to bed laden with obligations and heavy with
+the sense of favours which can never be repaid. There
+was now a <i>soupçon</i> of frost in the air, and notwithstanding
+the heat which we had endured the greater
+part of the day, fires were not ungrateful; and as
+we peered out of our windows over the roofs of the
+wide-spread houses of the town, we could see the
+snow on the lofty ranges of hills, watered by the South
+Platte River and Cherry Creek, which surround the
+cup in which Denver has been built in obedience to
+the impulses of the increasing population, which now
+numbers, I believe, 38,000 souls. There was a bright
+glare from the gas-lighted streets, sounds of music, and
+a tumult of life in the town which would have been
+creditable to an ancient metropolis. In the morning
+from the hotel windows appeared a beautiful and widespread
+panorama of the hills we had seen the evening
+before, peak above peak, none very densely covered
+perhaps, or presenting continuous snowfields, but
+extending in billowy sweeps far away to the horizon,
+all capped with snow, now bathed in a flood of fervent
+sunshine, the snow lighted up by the peculiar
+crimson tints common in Alpine regions. There
+were duties in the way of sight-seeing and exploration
+of no ordinary nature to be done. First there were
+interviews and receptions, and the inevitable drive
+through the place as soon as the ordeal of breakfast
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_93" id="Page_93">93</a></span>
+was over; and ordeal in some sort it was for the
+strangers to file in to the public room and take their
+places at their table, aware that the morning papers
+had subjected them to exhaustive criticism, which was
+being verified by those around us. The morning papers
+too had given some topics for reflection, indications
+that in the newly created capital of Colorado desperate
+men, overtaken by the march of law and order, had
+refused to accept service, and were vindicating their
+rights as wild western outcasts to take or part with
+life as of yore, in reckless encounters and deliberate
+assassinations. There were, perhaps, at that moment
+some hundreds, if not thousands, out of the population
+of 37,000 or 38,000 of the city, who belonged to the
+adventurous classes&mdash;sporting-men, betting-men, ring-men,
+bar-keepers, hell-proprietors, and their satellites,
+and the scum of the saloons attracted from the great
+cities of the States for hundreds of miles, by the
+prey which miners with belts full of gold, half mad
+with drink, and always fond of excitement, frequently
+are; and if to these be added the dissolute loafers
+and broken-down mining speculators, the strength
+of the army arrayed against the law may be estimated;
+and the wonder is that among a population armed
+to the teeth there are not more cases of such violent
+deeds as we were reading of at breakfast. To the
+stranger there was no evidence of the existence of
+these disturbing elements, unless the bearded and
+booted men with speculation in their eyes, in the hotel
+passages and halls, belonged to the dangerous, as they
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_94" id="Page_94">94</a></span>
+certainly did to the mining, classes. As to the resources
+of the city, although for rapidity of growth
+its wonders may be eclipsed by those of Leadville,
+Denver claims a very high place in the catalogue
+of these marvellous fungi of civilisation, of which
+the Western States present almost unique examples.
+There is everything that any one can want to be had
+for money in the place, and much more than most people
+need. Paris fashions and millinery are in vogue.
+There are fine shops, handsome churches, a theatre,
+breweries, factories, banks, insurance offices.</p>
+
+<p>The principal street exhibits pretty young people,
+who would have no occasion to fear comparison with
+the <i>beau monde</i> in Eastern or European capitals. The
+thoroughfares are crowded with vehicles, and spruce
+carriages and well turned-out horses may be seen in
+the favourite drive, that has been made over an
+indifferent road to the base of the Rocky Mountains,
+which appear to be close at hand, though they are
+thirteen miles away. But here and there in the well-dressed
+crowd may be seen a Bohemian <i>pur sang</i>, or a
+miner in his every day clothes, bent on a rig out and
+a good time of it. The streets, unpaved, dusty, and
+rugged, are very wide, and bordered with trees, and
+the houses generally are built of good red brick
+instead of wood; and there are runnels of water like
+those one sees in Pretoria and other Dutch towns in
+South Africa. The roads about the city leave much
+to be desired; but Rome was not built in a day.</p>
+
+<p>There are many ready-made clothing establishments
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_95" id="Page_95">95</a></span>
+in the main streets, and there is a heavy trade in
+tinned provisions. Through the Western States, as in
+South Africa, the débris of provision-tins constitutes
+a certain and considerable addition to the objects to be
+seen in the vicinity of every house, and to the mounds
+of rubbish in the street of every village. How indeed
+could the first-comers in such regions keep body and
+soul together without the supplies in such a portable
+form of the first necessaries of life? Having once run
+up a town in these remote wastes, the inhabitants are
+still compelled to make a liberal use of the same sort
+of food, and mines of tinned iron gradually accumulate
+around them.</p>
+
+<p>Our first excursion was to the Argo Works, under
+very pleasant auspices, for we had the wife of the Senator,
+who is one of the principal partners, and Mrs. Pearce,
+whose husband is largely interested in the works, taking
+charge of us. The works are at some distance outside
+the town, but the lofty chimneys vomit out quite sufficient
+vaporous fumes and smoke to blight the vegetation
+and to give the people near at hand a taste of their
+quality. I am not going to give a minute description,
+for more reasons than one, of what we saw at the
+works; but it was a very interesting exhibition of the
+processes by which the precious metals are extracted
+from the ores and delivered to commerce. The Argo
+Works simply assay and reduce ores on commission,
+but the business is on a very large scale. Immense
+piles, in fact small mountains, of brown, cinnamon and
+earth coloured dust and rock were heaped up in the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_96" id="Page_96">96</a></span>
+sheds, to be brought to the furnaces and turned, when
+divested of the lead, iron, copper, and gold, out in
+ingots of silver. All the methods for the extraction
+of silver were shown to us, but I committed a gross
+indiscretion when I asked, in my ignorance, "How
+do you extract the gold?" "That," said the urbane
+gentleman who was conducting us over the works,
+"we never permit strangers to see." So there is more
+there than meets the eye.</p>
+
+<p>The business of assaying here must be profitable, and
+if the reputation of any firm be once established there
+is a secure fortune for its members. The miners flock
+to them, and they can dictate terms. The extent of
+mining work in the country around may be inferred
+from the numerous offices in connection with it in the
+city. As a specimen of what Messrs. Bush and Tabor
+of our hotel give their guests for dinner, let me offer
+you this <i>menu</i> of the 5.30 ordinary to-day (June 16).
+Soup, beef à l'Anglaise; fish, boiled trout, anchovy
+sauce; corned beef, leg of mutton, sirloin beef, chickens
+with giblet sauce, fricassee à la Toulouse, veal, kidneys
+sautés aux croûtons, rice, croquettes, baked pork and
+beans, saddle of antelope, currant jelly, lamb, tongue,
+chicken salad, spiced salmon; innumerable "relishes"
+and vegetables, baked rice pudding, strawberry pie,
+apricot pie, jelly, blancmange, vanilla ice cream,
+macaroons, pound cake, fruit, Swiss cheese, nuts, coffee,
+&amp;c. The wines were not cheap: champagne 16<i>s.</i> a
+bottle, St. Julien 6<i>s.</i>, Leoville 14<i>s.</i>, sherry 8<i>s.</i>, brandy
+14<i>s.</i> per bottle. Orders for "drinks" at the bar after
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_97" id="Page_97">97</a></span>
+dinner were much more general than orders for wine
+at dinner.</p>
+
+<p>Denver, in spite of its mineral wealth, is very poor,
+however, in that of which the want would make life,
+even in America, intolerable. The supply of drinking-water
+is scanty and bad, and last year there was nearly
+a water famine. The <i>cartes</i> in the hotel announced
+"Water used in this room is boiled and filtered." But
+great efforts have been made to furnish the inhabitants
+with a store, constant and adequate, of the precious
+fluid, and we saw very considerable works, the property
+of an Irish gentleman, erected before the town attained
+its present dimensions, which were to be supplemented
+by a new enterprise respecting which we
+heard much. Perhaps no town of equal size in an equal
+length of time has ever had so much money and money's
+worth flowing in and through it as Denver since the
+Colorado mines were worked. It is asserted that the
+trade of the town for 1881 will exceed 8,000,000<i>l.</i>
+Colorado in 1879 yielded ores to the value of more
+than 3,750,000<i>l.</i> The output in the present year will
+exceed that of 1880. In that year $35,417,517 worth of
+gold and $20,183,889 of silver (more than 11,000,000<i>l.</i>)
+was deposited in the United States Mint and Assay
+Office. There is, besides, vast wealth in flocks and
+herds, and Denver is the place where the people resort
+from Colorado for purposes of trade and pleasure;
+altogether an astounding place, with a future quite
+dazzling to think of, unless the mines give in, and even
+then Colorado cannot again be poor; its climate and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_98" id="Page_98">98</a></span>
+scenery will always attract travellers, and its capacity
+for feeding sheep and cattle will secure its population.
+"And as to the beetle?" Why, no one would have
+anything to say to it. Nothing was known of it.
+There might be such things in other States. "And
+the name?" Probably it was a red-coloured bug, and
+got the name Colorado just as the river, or tobacco,
+was called, from the hue of it. At all events the bug
+did not belong to the State.</p>
+
+<p>The interest which the progress of Colorado and the
+condition of society in the State excite was exemplified
+by the appearance in Denver of a party of Hungarian
+noblemen, whose names gave occasion for stumbling to
+the journalists who copied them out of the Hotel Register&mdash;Count
+Andrassy and others, who were travelling
+under the guidance of Dr. Rudolf Meyer, of Vienna.
+Although the air of Denver is so much bepraised,
+it happens that most of our party felt rather overcome
+at the end of our excursion through the town
+and the visit to the smelting works, and one of
+the Hungarians was confined to his room. However,
+they sallied out before dinner, and a gloomy
+prophet of evil remarked, "If these strangers should
+have a difficulty, I consider they'll hev only theirselves
+to blame. Some citizens don't like strangers
+comin' in and starin' at them, and they're apt to be
+awkward in their tempers in the afternoon." Knowing
+no danger, and fearing none, they went off, and were a
+long time absent. Meantime we were preparing for
+the road, as we were bound for Leadville, the city of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_99" id="Page_99">99</a></span>
+the "biggest boom" of mining times&mdash;"the Silver El
+Dorado," as the guide-book, with a magnificent "bull,"
+describes it. Our Hungarian friends returned to the
+hotel ere we left. They were filled with enthusiasm,
+and with a good deal also of curiosity in regard to the
+shootings of which they had heard so much, and were
+following in our track next day, and so we parted <i>sans
+adieux</i>. How the love of gold has filled these lone
+valleys with desperate men! "They are a rough lot,
+sure enough," said the landlord, "but lynching keeps
+them down; and it is much better than hanging according
+to law, to my mind. It certainly is cheaper."
+"How is it cheaper?" "Why," said he, "when a
+man is prosecuted, or when he is tried before the
+judges, the law expenses are heavy, and they fall on
+the county. When a man is lynched there is only the
+expense of the rope, and a little loss of time for the boys
+who do the job." From Denver to Pueblo and from
+Pueblo to Leadville the line is on the narrow-gauge
+principle, and our train, which left at seven o'clock in
+the evening, seemed to be driven on no principle at all;
+for, anxious to astonish a Duke perhaps, or Britishers
+generally, the driver did what certainly could not be
+called his level best to send us along up and down
+a very rough line, and round the sharpest curves, at
+the rate of forty miles an hour, so that when we
+turned in, our rest, if rest at all it were, was exceedingly
+broken, and we trundled about in our
+berths as if we were in a ship in a pretty heavy
+sea. Still this narrow-gauge was the only line which
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_100" id="Page_100">100</a></span>
+could be made through such a country as we were
+traversing. Peeps out of the window ever and anon
+revealed, high up amongst the stars, rugged mountain-tops,
+and for ever there came the sound of rushing
+water, near or remote, as the train "bounded" on its
+course. I do not know what stations we passed on
+our way, but the night was very long, and I greeted
+with pleasure the first gleam of light above the hill-tops.
+The Arkansas River was on our left, and at
+dawn we had glimpses of its turbid stream running
+madly in deep gorges far below us. At the South
+Arkansas station the train halted soon after daybreak,
+and then we diverged from the main line, and a light
+train took us over the Arkansas River by a fine bridge
+on its way up the Gunnison Extension to visit the
+highest mountain-pass traversed by a railway in the
+world. South Arkansas station is 217 miles from
+Denver, and is 6944 feet&mdash;and Marshall Pass (25 miles
+away), to which we were bound, is 10,760 feet&mdash;above
+sea-level. There were grades of 211 and curves of 24°
+on the way, and the railroad twisted in and out among
+the ravines like an iron Alexandrine, for ever ascending
+till we had passed the limits of forest life. There were
+stations at short intervals&mdash;Poncha Springs, Mears,
+Silver Creek&mdash;from each other. From the stations
+there is a good deal of cross-country traffic, and at one
+place we saw three stages laden with men and women&mdash;or
+rather, to be polite and accurate, let me say with
+women and ladies&mdash;starting, one with six horses, and
+the other two with four each. These were bound for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_101" id="Page_101">101</a></span>
+Gunnison, and as we were halting for a little, the Duke
+and some others got out of the train, and sauntered up
+towards the wooden shanties which formed "the town,"
+consisting of the usual array of saloons and drinking
+places. However, our course was cut short by the
+information vouchsafed by one of the officials, that it
+might be as well not to go up, as there had been
+a big shooting match that morning, and that one
+man was killed and four had been wounded, "and
+some of them were on the drink yet." From 4.30 <span class="s08">A.M.</span>
+to 6.45 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> we struggled up towards the pass till
+the line came to an end near the summit, and we
+were rewarded by some very fine views, exceedingly
+like those of the Mont Cenis Railway or the Sömmering.
+The hills on both sides of the line were
+stippled and flaked with snow, but there was no extensive
+field, so far as the eye could see, nor was there
+any appearance whatever of a glacier, the tops generally
+being clear of snow, which only lodged in the
+ravines and hollows. Strange it was in these alpine
+heights to hear the clang of Italian tongues; but most
+of the navvies were from Italy, and if not quite so
+strong as English or Americans, they were in more
+favour with contractors, because they did more work,
+owing to their steadiness and sobriety. The line was
+being pushed on at an astonishing rate, and one man
+was pointed out to us who had laid four and a half
+miles of railway in one day, "the biggest thing of the
+kind ever done." Our enjoyment of the scenery was
+very much diminished by our animal appetites, stimulated
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_102" id="Page_102">102</a></span>
+by the sharp mountain air, which craved incessantly
+for food. But not even a cup of coffee was
+to be had until we got back to the South Arkansas
+station, late in the morning, where an excellent breakfast
+awaited us. Here we were detained some time by
+a derailment of an engine in front.</p>
+
+<p>From South Arkansas station to Leadville (61 miles)
+the railroad is still more aspiring. The higher we
+ascend the less striking are the scenic effects, but the
+grades are not very severe till we come to Malta,
+where it reaches 130; from Hilliers to Leadville the
+maximum is 176, the curves being often 15°. The
+general character of the country may be conceived
+from these figures, but no words can convey any idea
+of the wholesale destruction of timber which has marked
+the progress of the explorers and prospectors. Where
+the axe was weary the blaze and the fire were called in,
+and hundreds of miles of forest are laid in blackened
+ruin. At last we are on a level with the hill-tops.
+There, on the hill-tops and in the valleys of a sterile
+region in front of you, amidst those tall chimneys
+vomiting out smoke and steam, is a wilderness of
+wooden huts, "the Great Carbonate Camp"&mdash;where we
+leave the train&mdash;spread out over an undulating plateau,
+broken into mound-like hills and sharp hillocks&mdash;bustling
+streets filled with the most remarkable swarm
+of all nations that ever settled on any one spot in
+the world. The story of Leadville reads like a
+chapter out of some book of Oriental fable. It is a
+huge barrack of wooden houses, with some solid and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_103" id="Page_103">103</a></span>
+important buildings, with masses of tree-stumps cropping
+up in the centre of the main thoroughfares,
+pitched over an undulating, rugged, dusty ledge. In
+the midst of blocks of houses sprout up the chimneys
+of furnaces and mining works, the clang of machinery
+fills the air, which is thick with clouds of dust. It was
+a few years ago an utterly wild, lifeless waste amidst
+the mountains covered with forests, when three
+brothers, named Gallagher, exploring from California,
+were led by some genius, good or bad, to test the
+material of the rocks in the ravine. They struck gold
+ore, and silver too, and they set up a claim; and
+presently they sold their shares in the land which they
+had appropriated, for 40,000<i>l.</i>, which they divided.
+Two used their wealth wisely, and made more of it,
+and, taking to themselves the members of the family,
+throve exceedingly; one, not so wise, if he were quite
+as good, did not prosper as well as his brothers. But
+the scene of their operations was soon swarming with
+enterprising miners. There was a mighty "boom."
+Now there is a city! Leadville is, I think, the most
+astonishing city on earth, but I am not by any means
+inclined to say that it is a place I should like to be
+astonished about for more than a few hours.</p>
+
+<p>The party drove to the Morning Star, said to be
+the best mine in Leadville; and the Duke, Lady Green,
+Sir Henry Green, and others, went down the mine
+in miners' clothes or cloaks. Two others, whose names
+I shall not give, remained above, and had, I fancy,
+the best of the time. Afterwards we visited Grant's
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_104" id="Page_104">104</a></span>
+Smelting Works, and then back to the Clarence Hotel
+and dined, strolling out afterwards through the town
+and visiting the billiard saloons, the Grand Central
+Theatre, and finally, where we were told Leadville life
+was to be seen in all its glory, the faro and the kino
+tables, which, however, were doing but very little
+business, as it was not until after midnight that play
+in the town generally commenced. Instead of sleeping
+at the hotel, we resolved to take refuge in the train,
+which was drawn up at the siding; and we had to
+drive in order to reach it, as it was considered unsafe
+to walk through the streets in the dark.</p>
+
+<p>We started at four o'clock next morning, June 18th,
+and on arriving at Arkansas Station learned that an
+engine was off the line in front of us. Breakdown gangs
+were sent for, and all the locomotive talent amongst
+our passengers repaired quickly to the scene. As it
+was not easy to lift the engine, the engineers adopted
+the expedient of laying a temporary rail to turn its
+flank so as to enable us to pass round it, which we
+did after a delay of about an hour. The Duke got
+out and sat on the cow-catcher by way of a change.
+But the interest we took in the scenery was somewhat
+diminished by the intelligence that the delay
+caused by the engine would prevent our enjoying the
+"soda bath" we had been promised at Cañon City, and
+the sight of the State Prison, where murderers were
+to be paraded by the dozen. About twenty miles
+north of the Grand Cañon, the gorges through which
+the river runs became wider and deeper. All that has
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_105" id="Page_105">105</a></span>
+been written about the Grand Cañon utterly fails to
+convey an adequate idea of its exceeding grandeur and
+wildness. The rocks&mdash;closing in so that the spectator
+in the car, looking forward, thinks the progress of the
+train must be arrested, and that it is not possible for
+it to get out of the <i>cul de sac</i> which appears in front,
+rising aloft for upwards of two thousand five hundred
+feet on each side&mdash;are coloured with the brightest
+hues, and present an infinite variety of form. The
+impetuous current of the Arkansas River, contracted at
+times to the breadth of some twenty or thirty yards, and
+penned into a space in which the waters boil and toss
+as if about to leap on and submerge the passing cars,
+roars wildly down below on our right at a depth varying
+as the line rises and falls. But it is at the Bridge&mdash;a
+triumph of engineering skill&mdash;that the horrors of the
+pass culminate. The sides of the ravine approach so near
+that the daring engineer was enabled to execute the idea
+of lowering from above a <img src="images/triangle.jpg" width="15" height="18" alt="Triangle" />-shaped frame or trestle of
+iron; and, the ends catching on each side of the
+gorge, permitted him to work on it for the construction
+of the iron platform over which the train is
+carried at a height of some hundreds of feet right
+over the maddened river. You can look down through
+the interstices of the girders and glance shudderingly
+at the hell of waters below&mdash;a sight and sensation
+never to be forgotten. The ravine gradually expands
+and the cliffs recede as the line strikes eastwards; and
+though the scenery retains a wild and savage character
+for many miles farther, the impressions of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_106" id="Page_106">106</a></span>
+Grand Cañon caused us to regard it with comparative
+indifference. We heard many tales of the great railway
+war which was waged for the possession of the
+pass, of which traces still remained in the ruins of
+posts of vantage and observation, and the works of the
+defeated railroad visible on the other side of the ravine.
+At night we reached Pueblo and took up our quarters
+in our own cars, and continued our journey, after some
+delay, towards Kansas City.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_107" id="Page_107">107</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER V.<br />
+KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Liquor Law&mdash;Kansas Academy of Science&mdash;An Incident of Travel&mdash;A
+Parting Symposium&mdash;Life in the Cars&mdash;St. Louis to New
+York.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>June 19th.</i>&mdash;Still on the rolling prairies; in the
+country of compulsory abstinence&mdash;the paradise of Sir
+Wilfred Lawson. At 9.30 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> the train stopped at
+Newton, 431 miles from Pueblo, and 281 from Kansas.</p>
+
+<p>Here a phenomenon&mdash;there was a man by the road side
+who walked with unsteady step, whose legs
+tottered, and who lurched violently as he came down
+the road at that early hour. "He is a sick man,"
+observed one of my friends in the train; "that gentleman
+has been taking <i>medicine</i>." In the Kansas Act
+there is a clause enabling physicians, in case of need,
+to order stimulants for the patients without penalty;
+but I am told the doctors have generally refused to act
+upon that permission, so I suppose our friend had been
+consulting an unlicensed practitioner.</p>
+
+<p>It would be ill done, when I am anxious to acknowledge
+the pleasure and profit which I derived from my
+passage through the State, if I did not record the
+satisfaction with which I perused a volume of the
+"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science,"
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_108" id="Page_108">108</a></span>
+which by accident I picked up at one of the stations.
+The very name speaks trumpet-tongued for the progress
+which has been made in this wild region. The year
+before last, the twelfth annual meeting of the Academy
+was held in Topeka, and I find amongst the list of papers
+read such subjects as these:&mdash;The Kansas Lepidoptera;
+Kansas Minerals; the Mounds of Southern Kansas;
+Recent additions to Kansas Plants; Kansas Botany;
+Kansas Meteorites; Phonetic representations of Indian
+Language; Sinkholes; Elementary Sounds of Language;
+Mound-builders; On Recent Indian Discoveries.
+And among the lecturers there was Professor
+B. F. Mudge, who died last year, whose name probably
+is known to a very limited number of scientific
+men outside the University of Kansas. Generally the
+papers contributed by the gentlemen of the State attest
+industry and attainments which make their praise of
+the Professor particularly valuable. It is curious
+enough to pick up in a railway carriage, traversing
+such a scene of comparative wildness and vast uninhabited
+plains in Western Kansas, an exceedingly
+interesting examination of the Helmholtz theories of
+sight. The object of the lecturer would scarcely be
+suspected by the reader. We had already been struck
+by the extraordinary absence of signalmen, or of any
+of the complex apparatus of men and machinery which
+may be seen in Europe, and notably in England, to
+report the progress of trains on the lines. Collisions,
+however, occur in America where these precautions are
+not taken, and the lecturer attributed a good deal of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_109" id="Page_109">109</a></span>
+these accidents to colour-blindness, which appears to
+have attracted considerable attention in the United
+States. Surgeons, pilots, &amp;c., are tested for colour,
+and in the army colour-blindness disqualifies the recruit
+for employment in the signal corps. Altogether
+the papers give an impression that in this new State
+there are diligent students of natural history and
+physics, and profound inquirers into all the phenomena
+of life. There was a reverse to the medal.</p>
+
+<p>At a station where the train halted beyond Pueblo,
+a card was handed to me by one of the stewards. "The
+gentleman is, as he seemed very pressing, outside; but
+I told him you were engaged." I started as I read the
+name and address on the card, as well I might. They
+indicated that an old friend whom I had left in a condition
+of great bodily weakness and infirmity in London,
+was close at hand in this remote region&mdash;a wonderful
+if welcome fly in amber. I ran out of the drawing-room
+into the next car, and there saw a man, agitated and
+travel-worn, whom I had never, to the best of my belief,
+seen in my life before. His story was told, if not soon,
+at least in time to let me partly understand the situation
+ere the train moved off. The stranger had been in the
+service of the gentleman whose card he sent in to me,
+but had left it to better himself in America, and had
+gone out as valet to an American of good position at
+Colorado Springs. He found, however, according to his
+own account, that he was expected to do things not
+required of a valet in his own country, such as lumbering,
+wood-cutting, and the like, and so he had thrown up
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_110" id="Page_110">110</a></span>
+his situation and was going back to England. He had
+had quite enough of Colorado Springs. "I was not
+there above a month, and I was shot at twice," he said.
+"Once because I made some remark in a bar-room,
+where a chap was abusing Englishmen; and another
+time while I was speaking in the street to a man a
+fellow had a grudge against. He fired at him across
+the road, and the ball whistled within a hair's-breadth
+of my head." He had arrived at Pueblo some time
+before our special, and as the morning was warm,
+he walked into a bar near the platform, while the
+engine of his train was watering, to get a glass of
+lemonade. As he was drinking it, a man walked in
+and called for a glass of whisky, putting down, at
+the same time, what seemed to be a bank note, on the
+counter. The boniface said, "I haven't got change
+for this twenty-dollar bill&mdash;perhaps this gentleman
+can oblige you." The unsuspecting Briton, who had
+put the money for his passage to Liverpool in a purse,
+drew it out to change the note, and the strange
+customer at once seized it from his hand, and rushed
+off towards the street with his booty. The Britisher
+ran after him, but checked his wild career when he
+saw, within an inch of his head, the muzzle of a revolver
+which the robber had drawn, and the fellow
+vanished. "Won't you help me to stop the thief; you
+see what has happened?" exclaimed the victim turning
+to the barman. "I guess there was no money in that
+purse, sir. And if there was, perhaps you had no
+more right to it than he had." Then the Briton
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_111" id="Page_111">111</a></span>
+dashed off after Don Guzman, shouting "police," and
+was at once accosted by an officer of the Pueblo force.
+He hurriedly stated the facts. The policeman smiled.
+"I think you won't see that pile agin," he remarked;
+"and if you don't look sharp ye'll miss yer train, that's
+a fact!" The man had his railway ticket all right, a
+few dollars in his pocket, and I told him I would see
+him and get him a passage, if I found on inquiry his
+story was true. My companions thought the tale suspicious&mdash;but
+I believe it was true, and I subsequently
+franked the man to England.</p>
+
+<p>Now here we had an exemplification of the manners
+and customs of the district. Such an act of violence
+and robbery might occur in London&mdash;anywhere. But
+what of the apathy, or perhaps complicity, of the bar man?
+And if it or they be considered not altogether
+abnormal, is the conduct of the policeman to be accepted
+as quite consistent with the discharge of a
+policeman's duty? Well, whilst I was pondering on
+these things, there came to me the best possible adviser&mdash;a
+judge in this Israel&mdash;our excellent Palinurus,
+Mr. White. He threw a new, if not a side light on the
+subject. "Depend on it he is a confidence man. The
+trains are full of them! Our conductors have express
+orders about the rascals." And he explained that a
+confidence man is a swindler&mdash;very often an Englishman,
+who makes it his business to look out for unwary
+strangers, on whom he imposes with some tale of distress,
+or some recital of imaginary misfortune and
+adventure. As the man I had seen was coming on in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_112" id="Page_112">112</a></span>
+the train in our wake, Mr. White promised to talk
+with the conductor, and find out, if he could, the truth
+about the Pueblo robbery. Before dusk a telegram
+was forwarded by him to me from the station where he
+left us, to say that the conductor had no doubt the
+man was robbed, but that it was partly his own fault,
+and to warn me to be cautious in my dealings with
+him.</p>
+
+<p>We have now been travelling straight on end for
+1160 miles, with only two engineers and two firemen
+and one engine, a feat of endurance which has greatly
+exercised the Duke of Sutherland, who, as a practical
+director of the London and North-Western Railway,
+has knowledge of such matters, and who contrasts the
+performance with the experience he has on the home
+lines, where engines, engineers, and firemen would
+have been relieved or laid up over and over again.
+The head engineer of the line, who joined us, Mr.
+Hackney, formerly of Congleton, had become accustomed
+to these journeyings and endurances, which
+were brought to the front in our conversation by the
+engine-driver appearing at the door of the carriage to
+claim a dollar which he had won from the Duke in a
+bet that he could not do the distance without laying
+up the engine for repairs.</p>
+
+<p>All the long Sabbath-day we travelled on through
+the prairie, catching glimpses now and then of wooden
+villages, around which trees were beginning to sprout
+up, and of the little churches with knots of carts,
+waggons, horses, and buggies outside, and people waiting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_113" id="Page_113">113</a></span>
+for the end of the sermon. Now and then, perhaps
+at intervals of fifteen miles or so, are places of larger
+importance, such as Emporia, a rising city on the plains,
+where many steeples pointed aloft indicated considerable
+diversity of creed. An authority, not always to
+be relied upon, stated that there are fourteen churches
+belonging to the town.</p>
+
+<p>There was a parting symposium in the second
+Pullman ere we reached Topeka. Mr. White, Major
+Anderson, General Brown, Mr. Jerome, and my much
+wandering compatriot, a veritable Irish Ulysses, raised
+the tuneful melodies of the "Golden Slipper," the
+"Little Brown Jug," and the other tender psalmodies
+which had whiled away so many hours, for the last time
+in our society, and the little gages which were but the
+outward and visible signs of the regard we felt for our
+friends were exchanged with honest effusion. There
+may be&mdash;nay, there are&mdash;many jealousies and causes of
+estrangement between the people of the Old Country
+and of the New, but between the individuals of both
+there is a <i>camaraderie</i> which cannot, I believe, be found
+between Englishmen and the natives of any country
+except America.</p>
+
+<p>"Good bye! God bless you! Be sure if ever you
+come to England you shall have a hearty welcome from
+me." "And from me!" "And me!" "And me!"
+The engine bell tolled, and we moved slowly on.</p>
+
+<p>And we were left all alone! The pleasant companions
+of so many weeks had gone! I wonder if they
+missed us as much as we missed them?
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_114" id="Page_114">114</a></span></p>
+
+<p>While travelling across the Rockies and the desert to
+San Francisco and back, our course of life was pretty uniform,
+and one day followed another with almost perfect
+resemblance in the mode of existence and in all things
+except the scenery and the country through which we
+were passing. First, in the early morning came one
+of the attendants to our bedside with a cup of coffee,
+and then the curtains of the little cubicle were thrown
+aside and you looked out on either plain, or mountain,
+or river, or col; and on the faces of early risers at doors
+or windows as the train passed through some rising
+town. At one end of the saloon there was a bath-room,
+and from the tank there was always to be obtained
+sufficient water for the purpose of an early dip, which
+was enjoyed as occasion offered in turn by the party.
+Then a cigarette. Then we dropped in as people do at
+a country house, into the sitting-room, and exchanged
+ideas as to the progress made during the night, and the
+stoppages, wondered where we were, and had a little
+conversation with the conductor or Arthur as to the
+place where we could stop or get the papers&mdash;and so
+got over the morning till 9 o'clock, when breakfast was
+announced, consisting of fish, poultry, meat, fruit (I
+had nearly said flowers, for there was always a bouquet
+on the table), tea, coffee, and cold dishes, with abundance
+of milk and butter. Where the fish came from and how
+they were kept fresh was matter of wonder, for the instances
+were very rare in which there was any indication
+that it had not quite recently come out of the sea or the
+river. The supply of ice was liberal and unfailing,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_115" id="Page_115">115</a></span>
+and whenever we stopped at any considerable station
+the whole disposable strength of the attendants in the
+train was employed in grappling with large blocks of
+it and stowing it away in the ice reservoir, in which
+were the larder and the cellar for such wines as needed
+cooling, and for the vegetables and meat, of which there
+were great stores constantly laid in. Then after
+breakfast there was reading or sight-seeing, investigating
+the line, examining the maps, receiving visits
+and returning them in other parts of the train, till in
+the very hot days it was necessary, after expelling the
+flies, which were troublesome on occasion, to draw the
+dust-blinds and the curtains of the carriages, to mitigate
+the fierceness of the sun. It was objected occasionally
+that by this process we deprived ourselves of the opportunity
+of what was called "seeing the country," but
+after all a glance now and then is quite sufficient to
+reveal the general character of the districts through
+which the train is running; and the most diligent and
+painstaking observer cannot keep his eyes fixed steadily
+for a day on the external aspects of the region through
+which he is travelling. I should be sorry to declare
+that every one was wide awake all the time of the forenoon
+and up to the period of lunch, which too often
+exceeded on the side of many dishes, being, in fact, a
+mid-day dinner; but then no one was obliged to eat
+more than he liked, or drink either. Then came
+the longest stretch of the day, and at its close
+another banquet; and as the sun declined and the
+temperature decreased, we could take more pleasure in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_116" id="Page_116">116</a></span>
+looking out at the fantastic forms of the vegetation
+which clothed the arid rocks in the desert, or on the
+bright green prairie, or on the towering mountains,
+waiting till the sun had set, generally in a blaze of
+glory. There were, of course, interruptions and variations
+as we halted at the more important places;
+disappointments about letters which had been telegraphed
+for and which were expected day after day,
+constituted also a matter of conversation and discourse.
+There was an harmonium in the sitting-room of the
+palace car, but no one had the art of playing it,
+although we had plenty of music of another sort; for
+after dinner the gentlemen of the railroad party who
+had not dined with us came in, and we were never
+tired of listening to the songs, so original and amusing,
+which they gave with great spirit and admirable
+time and tune, for it happened they all possessed good
+voices, and the melodies with which the troops of
+coloured minstrels have now rendered the world
+familiar were then new to us.</p>
+
+<p>During the whole of our tour the weather has been
+most favourable. With the exception of the rainy days
+in Canada, and the cold and rawness which characterised
+the time of our short visit to Richmond, there was
+nothing worse to complain of than continual sunshine.
+Now and then the temperature was a little too good to
+be pleasant when we were traversing the beds of the
+dry seas in the desert in Colorado and California, but
+that was something to look back upon with satisfaction,
+because there was no time lost in keeping within doors
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_117" id="Page_117">117</a></span>
+owing to the rain and storm or cold. "Within doors,"
+however, is a phrase scarcely applicable to our mode of
+life, as it would imply that we were in stable habitations,
+whereas, as will have been seen by those who
+have accompanied us so far, we "lived and moved, and
+had our being" in railway carriages; a mode of life
+rendered so comfortable by all appliances, that it was
+sometimes no relief to be told that we would have to
+pass the night at an hotel.</p>
+
+<p>For nine days and nine nights in succession, on one
+occasion, we never slept out of the carriages or got out
+of the train except to take a stroll about the station, or
+a peep into the street of a small town whilst we were
+waiting, and one got quite accustomed to that nomad
+and yet civilised mode of existence, where at every
+halting-place we were supplied with the latest intelligence
+by the local papers, and made the recipients of
+some attention or courtesy, visits and compliments (the
+remarks of the other sort not being many), bouquets of
+flowers, presents of fruit, and plenty of conversation.
+But that my critics might say I dilate too much upon
+the material enjoyment of life, I would describe at
+length the means which were supplied in the course of
+these long journeys for animal enjoyment. Never could
+there be found more attentive and obliging domestics
+than the coloured men who waited upon us&mdash;Arthur
+and his fellows. There lived in the kitchen compartment
+of the train, at the end of one of the saloons, a
+coloured cook, very intelligent and gossipy, full of
+quaint conceits and dishes and conversation, who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_118" id="Page_118">118</a></span>
+commenced life as a slave on a Southern plantation,
+probably adopted for indoor purposes on account of his
+smartness. He liberated himself in the course of the
+war, and marched off with a regiment of Federals in
+the capacity of cook and body-servant to one of the
+officers, wherein he saw a great amount of very hard
+fighting at very close quarters. This adventurous
+modern Othello was wont to discourse with much animation
+when he came out for a breath of fresh air on
+the platform and could find anybody to talk to him,
+although he could move no more tender heart than
+that of Sir Henry Green. The gentlemen of the
+Atchison, &amp;c., Railway, when travelling with us, had
+a <i>cordon bleu</i> in the saloon&mdash;an Italian or Frenchman,
+I think, or at all events a French-speaking man, who
+had served also, and would have done credit to an
+establishment where faults in a <i>chef</i> would not lightly
+be condoned. In the interchange of courtesies, Mr.
+White and his friends invited our party now and then
+to dine in the saloon, which was not "across the way,"
+but up a little, on the line, being the saloon in front
+of us.</p>
+
+<p>But here we are at Kansas City once again! At
+5.30 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> the train arrived at the platform, which was
+gay with a Sunday crowd, of whom many were negresses&mdash;black,
+brown, brindled, and yellow <i>citoyennes</i>&mdash;in
+much variety of colour and garmenting. Unlike Samson,
+their weakness is in their hair, and like Achilles, they
+are vulnerable about the heels (to the arrows of an
+æsthetical criticism, which accepts the Greek idea of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_119" id="Page_119">119</a></span>
+beauty in form); but they seemed to enjoy life amazingly,
+and not to be in need of beaux; perhaps the
+happiest people in the world now that their chattel
+days are over. It was late when we turned into our
+berths, for it was a lovely night and the fire-flies exercised
+a great attraction over us, but at last the charm
+was worn out and we slept till morning without a
+break.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 20th.</i>&mdash;Still the same boundless plain. In vain
+does one look for the grass fields with close, even,
+carpet-like surface to be seen in Europe. We are still
+passing through exceedingly rich land&mdash;the fields covered
+with flocks of sheep and herds of good-looking cattle.
+There are more trees by the stream-side, and shrubs
+growing in the hollows. Habitations are more frequent,
+and so are fencing and planting. As the sun was
+setting we approached St. Louis. There were some
+park-like glades, and vistas opening up to pleasant
+mansions, amid grounds showing marks of culture.
+There had been a severe thunderstorm the night before,
+and the St. Louis Station had still traces of its effects
+in pools of mud. But the rain had cooled the air, and
+the people were rejoicing exceedingly in the great
+improvement that had taken place in the weather, for,
+they told us, men and women had been dropping down
+with the heat a few days ago as though they had been
+struck by musketry.</p>
+
+<p>The appearance of the St. Louis Terminus gave
+one a high idea of the importance of this city. Eight
+trains were waiting on their respective lines to start
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_120" id="Page_120">120</a></span>
+with passengers to all parts of the Union; and by
+the simple device of placing at the end of each train
+a large board announcing its destination and the time
+of its departure, much anxiety was saved to intending
+passengers, not to speak of the irritation of officials
+avoided by this simple expedient. The journey was
+continued by the <a name="Indianopolis" id="Indianopolis">Indianopolis</a> and Vandalia, and by
+what is called the "Pa'handle" line to the Pennsylvania
+Railroad on to Philadelphia. The train was timed
+on Tuesday so that we were able to see the famous
+passage over the Alleghany Mountains from Conemaugh
+to Altoona. For nearly eleven miles we were
+carried without steam, and with the brakes on, through
+very fine scenery, down the mountain-side, but the
+summit was crossed in the darkness of a tunnel 1200
+yards long. There are some striking engineering
+feats in the way of curves and gradients, and the
+trace of the line is very bold all the way down to
+Altoona, where the Pennsylvania Railroad engine and
+machinery shops are established&mdash;the centre of a
+population of some 17,000 souls, where twenty years
+ago "there were," as a friend said, "only bears,
+deer, woodpeckers, and skallywags." The Duke, Mr.
+Stephen, and our railway experts got out and visited
+the workshops, and came back very much pleased at
+the discovery of several London and North-Western
+men in good positions in the Pennsylvania Railroad
+Company's service, who welcomed their old directors
+with effusion, and that there was nothing visible there
+for Crewe to copy, unless perhaps cast-iron wheels.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_121" id="Page_121">121</a></span>
+The speed at which we travelled was a sensible proof
+that we were once more on the line of our old friends
+of Pennsylvania. From Altoona to Harrisburg, 132
+miles, we rattled along in two hours and forty-three
+minutes. On another stretch of the line we travelled
+eighty-three miles in one hour and forty-two seconds,
+including stoppages; and the rapid motion was very
+agreeable, as there was a perceptible increase of temperature
+after we reached the plains and approached
+the beautiful valley of the Susquehannah&mdash;a scene of
+industry, prosperity, and peace. Fortunately there
+was a good light on the river, and we had a fine
+view of the country all the way to Harrisburg under
+the rays of the setting sun. A little farther on we
+were gratified by the appearance of General Roberts
+at a station on the way, where he was awaiting the
+Duke to congratulate him on his safe return from
+the Western expedition, and we bade him farewell at
+his own house, with many sincere and well-deserved
+acknowledgments of great and constant kindness.
+Then over the river by the noble bridge, and on to
+Philadelphia. We did not visit Pittsburg, which was
+vomiting out masses of smoke, nor did we halt this
+time at the capital of the Quaker State.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_122" id="Page_122">122</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VI.<br />
+NEW YORK&mdash;NEWPORT&mdash;DEPARTURE.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Coney Island&mdash;Newport&mdash;Bass-fishing&mdash;Habit of Spitting&mdash;Brighton
+Beach&mdash;Newport&mdash;Coaching&mdash;Extra Ecclesiam&mdash;Victories
+of American Horses&mdash;Newport Avenues&mdash;Return to New
+York&mdash;Our last day in America.
+</p>
+
+<p>The special train was detained by the immense
+amount of traffic on the line, as we approached New
+York, and we did not reach Brooklyn till a little
+before 11 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> on June 21, so that it was past midnight
+when we ascended the steps of the Windsor
+Hotel, which we had selected by way of a change,
+and found to be every way commendable, with the
+exception of its distance from the busy parts of the
+city. The following day was devoted to letter reading
+and writing, receiving visitors, and various attempts
+"to go out," which were not generally successful, for
+New York was palpitating with the intense heat. The
+"heated term" was in full vigour, but it was now
+quite temperate in comparison to the excesses which
+had marked its advent some time before our arrival.
+In the evening we got up strength and courage
+enough to go to Wallack's Theatre, a very pretty,
+well-constructed house, and saw "The World" excellently
+acted and admirably put on the stage. Next
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_123" id="Page_123">123</a></span>
+day, June 23rd, in virtue of a solemn league and
+covenant with Uncle Sam and Mr. Hurlbut, the Duke
+and I devoted ourselves to fresh fields and pastures new,
+and ordered ourselves accordingly for Coney Island.
+A long bank of sand by the sea-shore has, by an
+accident, become one of the most crowded resorts in the
+world, and to-day there were races in the new ground.
+It was not, as we found, so easy to get there. Having
+the advantage of two experienced guides, our party of
+four managed to break up into two and to miss each
+other; one taking the boat at one iron pier, and the
+other embarking by a different mode of conveyance.
+But as we were bound to see Coney Island, the Race course
+being a secondary object, our temporary separation
+did not prove a source of great annoyance.</p>
+
+<p>The early settlers would indeed have been astonished
+if they could look round and see what they have
+brought the quiet place to in these later days. They
+were Quakers persecuted by the good Christians of New
+England, who were driven out of Boston as ruthlessly
+as though they had been malignants and papists of the
+worst sort. They settled the township of Gravesend
+about 250 years ago, and amongst the conspicuous
+settlers occurs the title and name of Lady Deborah
+Moody, of whom this deponent knows nothing, but
+wonders how, with such a title, she managed to have
+influence amongst a Society of Friends.</p>
+
+<p>A ship was built, so the Americans say, of 70 tons in
+1699, by the descendants of the Quaker settlers, and less
+than 100 years later the bold republicans, abandoning
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_124" id="Page_124">124</a></span>
+the doctrines of peace, engaged and captured an English
+corvette off the island. It was all along of General
+<a name="How" id="How">How</a>, who landed his troops here and set the people to
+work on the fortifications he threw up, whether they
+would or no. A corvette, bound to Halifax, anchored
+off the island, and an old whaler, who, says the
+chronicler, must have been smarting under the wrongs
+he had suffered at the hands of the red-coats, or who
+possibly regarded the work as he would the capture of
+a finner or a bottle-nose, imparted to a few trusty
+friends the idea of "cutting her out." So embarking
+at night in a couple of boats, they stole down with
+muffled oars and ran up under the stern of the ship.
+There was no watch, and through the cabin windows
+the officers could be seen playing cards. The crews of
+the boats boarded the corvette simultaneously, seized,
+overpowered, and bound the officers and men, lowered
+them into their boats, and, having set the man-of-war
+on fire, pulled over to the Jersey shore with their
+prisoners. It is to be hoped that the demeanour and
+language of the captain have been misrepresented by
+local tradition; but he is said to have cried bitterly,
+and to have exclaimed, "To be surprised and captured
+by two blooming egg-shells is too blasted bad!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a long period of neglect before Fashion
+and the populace found out the attractions of Coney
+Island. Fishermen, oyster-catchers, and sportsmen
+visited the sandy beach from time to time; then after
+a while a few houses were run up of a very inferior
+class, and these were frequented by the very worst of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_125" id="Page_125">125</a></span>
+the scum of New York, so that it was almost dangerous,
+and certainly disgusting, to go among them, while the
+scenes on the beach, to which the present proceedings
+afford such a contrast, were described as being of the
+most disgraceful character.</p>
+
+<p>The official directions for spending a day at Coney
+Island certainly indicate a belief in the possession of
+enormous physical energy and indefatigable curiosity on
+the part of the visitors in those who compose the code.
+Having given you sailing instructions by the iron steam boat
+to Bay Ridge for the Sea Beach Railway (ticket
+35 cents), you are to visit the Sea View Palace Hotel,
+the Piazza, the two iron piers, the <i>Camera obscura</i>
+(10 cents), the Great Milking Cow, the top of the observatory
+(15 cents); then to eat a Rhode Island clam bake
+(50 cents), visit the aquarium (10 cents), take a
+park waggon and ride over the Concourse to Brighton;
+see the hotel grounds and bathing pavilion there;
+then take the Marine Railway (5 cents) to Manhattan
+Beach; visit the Oriental Hotel and take the Marine
+Railway to Point Breeze (10 cents) and return back
+to Brighton Beach Pavilion and take a bath; then see
+the Museum of Living Wonders (10 cents), dine at the
+Hotel Brighton, hear a concert in the evening, and
+return to New York by 11 o'clock. "This trip,"
+observes the compiler, "may fatigue one, but the
+excitement soon overcomes the trouble." Coney
+Island is indeed an institution.</p>
+
+<p>Along the sea front of the bank for some three or four
+miles there has been constructed an esplanade lined
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_126" id="Page_126">126</a></span>
+with seats, and defended from the sea by a stone wall.
+Outside there is a belt of shingle on which the surf
+breaks, but not violently, unless in bad weather. Large
+bathing establishments, with every appliance, are placed
+at convenient intervals along the shore. Here in the
+season tens of thousands of people may be seen, all
+properly and decently attired, disporting in the waves.
+At the time of our visit, the hour and the season
+of the year seemed not to be favourable to the indulgence.
+We were too late in the day. It is an
+early place, and from 7 till 9 <span class="s08">A.M.</span> from the month
+of June to the end of September are described as
+the orthodox periods. Nevertheless the spectacle was
+quite unique, and if you can imagine Brighton with
+half-a-dozen Pavilions blown out to twice their size,
+and the largest hotels multiplied by ten in length,
+breadth, and depth, you may fancy what the Coney
+Island front is, provided always that you can also
+conjure up (literally) myriads of well-dressed men,
+women, and children perambulating the esplanade or
+sitting in the grounds around the various establishments
+which occupy a large space inland&mdash;pavilions,
+hotels, exhibitions, restaurants, and club-houses. There
+were fireworks going on in broad day; but these were
+principally for the purpose of exhibiting very ingenious
+Japanese figures, which were discharged from bombs,
+and which gradually descending were objects of eager
+competition amongst the younger members of the
+enormous multitude. And with all so much good-humour,
+so much propriety of demeanour; none of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_127" id="Page_127">127</a></span>
+brutal rushes of "roughs" which disgust one with
+English popular assemblages&mdash;none of the brutal horse-play,
+and screams, and unmeaning cries of the 'Arrys
+and the Bills of our popular resorts.</p>
+
+<p>Looking at Mr. Marshall's excellent book on the
+United States, which we found to be copious and
+accurate, I was struck by what he says respecting
+a habit of the people which, according to my experience,
+has very much decreased since I was last
+in the States, but which he finds in as full force, and
+repulsive as ever. I am bound to say I think the
+habit of spitting has very much diminished, but from
+numerous evidences, from the presence of spittoons in
+every room and in the passages of the hotels, and
+from public admonitions, such as one we saw at some
+of the theatres, that the audience would not spit upon
+the stage, I must believe that it still exists. What
+the cause of this habit may be it is not easy to determine.
+It cannot be in the race, because it is
+scarcely an "English" habit. I would be inclined to
+attribute it to the drinking of iced water, but ladies in
+America use the national beverage quite as freely as
+the men, and spitting is a masculine failing. Can it
+be a result of climate? Scarcely. For in the States,
+British-born people do not seem to be affected by the
+influence of the habit in those around them after
+many years' residence. Smokers and non-smokers alike
+indulge in the practice, so that tobacco cannot be
+charged with the disagreeable custom. I assume that
+it is as common as Mr. Marshall asserts it is, but
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_128" id="Page_128">128</a></span>
+I am bound to say, according to my own observation
+and experience on my last visit, that there was no
+evidence to show that it was common or national.
+Chewing tobacco also appears to me to have fewer
+votaries than formerly. A remark to that effect at
+Richmond brought upon me something like a rebuke
+from the gentleman to whom I spoke, a Judge of the
+land. "No, sir," he said, "not at all! I rather think
+we chew more than ever!" And, to illustrate his faith,
+he produced a silver box, shaped a plug of no doubt
+very excellent weed, and thrust it into his mouth. I
+do not recollect, however, meeting a gentleman in the
+course of our journey who used tobacco in that way,
+with that exception.</p>
+
+<p>In the grounds in front of the pavilion, where an
+excellent orchestra of some one hundred performers
+were playing, sat a very large and appreciative audience,
+who applauded with discrimination, and were content
+with the good performance of each piece.</p>
+
+<p>Our common rendezvous was the Surf Club, one of
+the numerous convivial associations for which Coney
+Island seems to be specially adapted; and I presume
+the name had nothing at all to do with any supposed
+amusements of the members in connection with the
+surf on the beach outside. There was some difficulty
+in finding our way through a labyrinth of rooms all
+filled with guests: with corridors swarming with
+people; with vast halls, where at hundreds of tables
+there were seated people engaged in the consumption
+of the <i>menu</i> of a Coney Island restaurant, abounding
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_129" id="Page_129">129</a></span>
+in strange dishes and attended by armies of waiters.
+At a rough guess, I should say there may have been
+about 4000 people in the building&mdash;and this was but
+one of several&mdash;I think the Brighton Beach Hotel,
+but of this I am not quite sure.</p>
+
+<p>When the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad
+was opened none believed in its success, but the foresight
+of the projector was justified; and when it was
+found that respectable people would go there, if the
+vagabonds of both sexes and their associates were
+driven away, the police asserted themselves, and swept
+off the gamblers and the others of a still more
+dangerous class, who were to be found there in
+increasing numbers every year; and then hotels were
+erected and landing-places made for the steamers;
+and now the electric light blazes in a hundred
+halls, and music and rejoicing sound late into the
+night, contending with the noise of the surf upon the
+beach. Bowling-alleys, shooting-grounds, archery,
+croquet, sailing and rowing, all invite some of the
+visitors, according to their tastes. An amusing exemplification
+of the ingenuity of American advertisers is
+afforded by the sailing vessels, which display in enormous
+characters on their main-sails the names of quack
+medicines, from which no corner of this continent
+appears to be safe.</p>
+
+<p>On June 24th the party, which had been somewhat
+dislocated, reunited their scattered forces, and at
+2 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> started by train after a little repose, for Newport,
+R.I. It was a kind of holiday after our travels,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_130" id="Page_130">130</a></span>
+but somewhat out of place, for we were told the
+Ocean House was scarcely ready; but we should not
+have found it out, had we not been informed of the
+fact. The newspapers had been on the alert, and soon
+after the Duke's arrival visitors began to call and
+invitations to pour in&mdash;some well-nigh irresistible, for
+they included opportunities for experiences of bass-fishing.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 25th.</i>&mdash;Newport has not yet put on its festive
+attire. It is not the season, and we ought not to be
+here. Nevertheless it is still so pleasant, and so respectably
+dull, that one enjoys it amazingly. After
+breakfast we walked down to the seashore and sat
+gazing on vacancy, and on three yellow ladies collecting
+clams. Returning thence in a very hot sun, ran to
+earth in the hotel where, presently, there were many
+visitors; and how kind and anxious to please they
+were! Mr. Fearing drove up later on the top of a drag,
+and whirled us away to a charming fishing-box on the
+shore, in order to judge for ourselves what bass-fishing
+was like. It was a very pretty drive, and Mr. Fearing
+handled his "four" as if he were bent on joining the
+Coaching Club&mdash;not indiscreetly, as the horses were
+not accustomed to going together, but with satisfactory
+decision&mdash;and we all were landed without mishap by
+the side of the road, close to one of the best-organised
+sporting-boxes I have ever seen, built entirely for the
+comfort and delectation of Mr. Fearing and two or
+three friends who own the bass-fishing stands, at the
+end of one of which a gentleman was then busily
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_131" id="Page_131">131</a></span>
+engaged in his pastime, for the sea comes rolling up
+upon the rocks within some forty or fifty yards of the
+sward of the green meadows on which the house is
+placed. From it projects into the breakers a platform
+supported on iron pillars, at the end of which there is
+an enlargement of the structure to enable the fisherman
+and his attendants to stand at their ease&mdash;the one
+in hurling the bait and the other in preparing it.
+And first, as a proof that the labour is not futile, there
+was exhibited a terrible-headed monster with great
+scales, which had been caught that morning by Mr.
+Whipple&mdash;a bass of 57 lbs. weight, of which I think
+the skull and jaws and gills must have weighed a third.
+The fishing is not, as I found, to be done at once, but
+needs a little practice. The art of casting consists in
+the double operation of jerking the bait from the top
+of a stiff rod, and checking the run of the line without
+permitting it to overrun, which it is very apt to do in
+an inexperienced hand, by a pressure of the thumb on
+the reel, just sufficient to let the weight of the bait carry
+out the hook to the farthest stretch of the jerk. The
+rod, not more than eight or nine feet long, a work of
+great art, and costly, is furnished with a reel, also very
+expensive, containing a couple of hundred yards of
+prepared line. At the end is a large single hook,
+sometimes secured to a piece of piano-wire, as the
+"blue fish" will cut through the strongest cord or
+gut. To this is fixed a junk of fat oily fish, of which
+supplies are kept in a basket close at hand, to be cut
+up for ever and ever by the attendant, and ever and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_132" id="Page_132">132</a></span>
+anon pieces are chucked into the sea, and being of
+a very unctuous nature, the oil rising to the top, floats
+away on the surface of the water, and attracts the bass
+within measurable distance of the platform. Captain
+Fearing threw, Mr. Whipple threw, and the gentlemen
+at the end of another pier emulated them, and pounds,
+perhaps stones, of bait were thrown into the sea, but
+the bass, which are capricious, like most fish, were not
+to be caught; and so after a time we returned to the
+cottage.</p>
+
+<p>I was, unfortunately, unable to accept an invitation
+from one of the many hospitable gentlemen in Newport,
+to go out and spend the evening on a desolate
+island, where they are said generally to have exceedingly
+good sport, in order to get up before sunrise the
+following morning and essay my skill, or want of it, in
+bass-fishing. Mr. Wright, an enthusiastic sportsman,
+availed himself of a like invitation with great pleasure
+and with many anticipations of delight, but on Monday
+morning he returned weather-beaten back, and boot-less
+and bass-less home, although he assured me he
+enjoyed himself very much, and had very agreeable
+company out at sea on the rock.</p>
+
+<p>The following day (June 26th) was cloudy and cool,
+and all that was of rank and fashion in Newport went
+to All Souls Church. There are many churches in
+Newport, and in the height of the season, each is, I am
+told, well filled on Sundays. And wonderful it is that
+there is neither dissension nor controversy among the
+congregations. They mingle together coming and
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_133" id="Page_133">133</a></span>
+going, affording to me, who have been accustomed at
+times to observe the manners and customs of my
+country men and women on like occasions in Ireland
+and elsewhere, ground for wonder, not unintermingled
+with an ardent desire that we, nearer home, could learn
+the secret of this moderation.</p>
+
+<p>Mr. Bridgman, our fellow-passenger in the "<i>Gallia</i>,"
+is enjoying his <i>villeggiatura</i> with his wife and family in
+a pretty little cottage. We were very much pleased
+indeed to renew our acquaintance with him, although
+there was no scope for the display of his fine talents
+as a salad-maker. It was not foggy enough for the
+ladies, who delight in a thick and moist <i>brume</i> from
+the Banks, and who sit at the open windows when it
+comes on for the sake of their complexions, as it is
+esteemed a sovereign cosmetic beyond Maydew or
+Kalydor. Whether it be rightly credited with these
+virtues or not, I can answer for the presence of many
+fair ladies in church, and on their way to and fro in
+the streets. We dined with Mr. and Mrs. Keene, who
+reside in one of the best villas of the many charming
+dwellings in Newport.</p>
+
+<p>The victories of the American horses in France and
+England created an enthusiasm in the States almost as
+intense as though they had been won by the national
+fleets or armies. From one end of the Union to the
+other the news was flashed the same day, and we saw the
+names of the conquerors in large letters in every newspaper.
+Unfortunately there came at the same time
+reports of foul play to American competitors at the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_134" id="Page_134">134</a></span>
+hands of some English roughs, and there was a good
+deal of heat caused by the objections taken to the
+entry of the "Cornell Crew" at Henley. These international
+contests should be very carefully conducted
+and judiciously worked, or they will do more harm
+than good, if indeed they do any good at all. The
+injurious insinuations respecting the age of Foxhall
+could but excite indignation in the minds of honourable
+men against whom they were directed.</p>
+
+<p>There is a State House in the town, and there is
+also a mansion occupied by Commodore Perry, but
+the most useful inhabitant of the place appears to
+have been one Abraham Touro, a Jew, who gave his
+name to the park, a cemetery, a synagogue, and a
+street. Altogether there is rather an old-world air
+and look in the town; but one must go along the
+Avenues to have an idea of the charms which lead so
+many of the principal families of the Eastern States
+to make the place a resort when they are not enjoying
+the delights of travel in Europe, or that blissful
+existence which endears Paris to our Transatlantic
+relatives. Bellevue Avenue is bordered by a number
+of very sprightly dwellings, of every order and disorder
+of architecture, and rejoicing in all the extraordinary
+richness and elaboration of American workmanship
+in wood, each standing in a little park of its
+own, generally rich with trees, shrubs, and an ornamental
+garden. Several of these interiors, as we
+had reason to know, were furnished in the very best
+taste, and filled with objects of art, excellent examples
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_135" id="Page_135">135</a></span>
+of good masters, principally foreign, and articles
+imported from all the corners of the globe. Of
+an afternoon the ladies might be seen driving, in
+very well turned-out carriages, to some rendezvous
+where lawn-tennis or a picnic awaited them; and
+altogether, even at this time of year, Newport
+presented a picture of great refinement and comfort,
+which enable the visitor to understand how attractive
+it must be in the height of the season, and why it is
+Americans are so fond of life in Rhode Island.</p>
+
+<p>I am not in a position to throw the smallest doubt
+upon the statement that the mass of stones in the
+form of a tower, ivy and moss covered, and evidently
+the work of human hands, was not built by the hardy
+Norsemen hundreds of years before the arrival of
+Columbus. There are, moreover, people who declare
+that the erection is due to a British governor of the
+colony, when it was more prosperous as a commercial
+resort, though not so fashionable as it is at present.
+But American antiquaries take a great pleasure in
+propping up the proofs which have been adduced of
+Scandinavian enterprise and discovery on the continent,
+many centuries before Vespuccius, Columbus, and
+the English navigators lived.</p>
+
+<p>We dined on the evening of the 27th at the house
+of Mr. Shattock, a gentleman of New York, who had
+assembled a party of very pleasant people to meet the
+Duke, and kindly hastened his dinner-hour to suit
+our convenience, as we were obliged to go on board
+the Fall River boat, which called at 9.30 <span class="s08">P.M.</span> to take
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_136" id="Page_136">136</a></span>
+up passengers for the Empire City. There was some
+difficulty about getting cabins or state rooms as they
+are called, but "Uncle Sam," who came from New
+York to consort with us quietly, applied himself
+diligently to telegraph wires, telephones, and the like,
+and when the great steamer came alongside the wharf
+our dormitories were ready. The night was calm and
+fine. There was an excellent band, quite worthy of
+being called an orchestra, on board, which played to
+the delight of a large audience till it was bed-time.
+As a "sight" for a foreigner, nothing could be more
+striking than the vast saloon, brilliantly illuminated,
+with hundreds of people on sofas, chairs, and benches,
+reading or conversing in the intervals of the music,
+and presenting infinite varieties of type and class, yet
+all so orderly and well-behaved; and if you moved
+quietly through the crowd, your ear caught many
+strange languages interpolating the American speech&mdash;German,
+French, Polish, Russian, Italian, and, perhaps
+the natives would say, British. There is some
+care observed in the locking up of cabins, and I believe
+there are detectives and police on board the boats;
+but it is said they do not look after the morals of the
+passengers, and concern themselves only with vested
+interests in portable property. There was no sea on,
+and the only motion was caused by the beating of the
+paddles and the throbbing of the engine, and early in
+the morning of the next day we were at our quarters
+in our comfortable hotel in the Fifth Avenue.</p>
+
+<p><i>June 29th.</i>&mdash;And yet more excursions. Bound by
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_137" id="Page_137">137</a></span>
+a long-standing engagement, a small detachment of our
+party set out this evening to visit Mr. Barlow at his
+country place, Long Island, which travellers, perhaps,
+have not much occasion to see. The Mayor of New York
+(Mr. Grace) and Mr. O'Gorman were on the steamer
+which took the Duke, Mr. S. Ward, Mr. Hurlbut, and
+our host down the Sound, and were introduced to us
+by Mr. Barlow. The first-named gentleman I mentioned
+in one of the early pages of this diary in connection
+with the vigorous efforts to purify the civic
+atmosphere made by him on his accession to office. I
+learn that he has since obtained a large measure of
+success, and let me hope corresponding thanks from
+his fellow-citizens. Attacks on corrupt influences are
+apt to receive lukewarm support from the politicians.
+The power of the respectable classes, which hold aloof
+from politics, is not large. Mr. Grace had more opposition
+than help from his own countrymen, who have
+been long nearly omnipotent in New York, and who
+monopolise a large proportion of the civic offices and
+employment. Mr. O'Gorman, one of the traversers
+with O'Connell in the famous State trials, is one of the
+leading lawyers of New York, and is held in much
+respect by his fellow-citizens. The "old Country" is
+still dear to him, but I seemed to gather from his
+remarks that he shared in the distrust which American
+lawyers generally expressed respecting the principle of
+the Land Bill then under discussion as far as interference
+with the law of contract&mdash;"the very foundation
+of social life"&mdash;was involved. Glen Cove is
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_138" id="Page_138">138</a></span>
+a beautiful place, standing high above the level of
+the sea, and commanding charming views of the
+sound and of the opposite shore. It is surrounded
+by trees, ornamented by woodland and fine natural
+groves, broken up by ravines, through which trickle
+streams of water. The mansion is furnished with
+every comfort and luxury, and we had a garden to
+saunter about in the morning, and a genial hostess to
+talk to, and her fair daughter to sing for us, so that
+it would have pleased us well to have made a longer
+sojourn at Glen Cove. Here we passed two very
+peaceful days, part of Wednesday and Thursday, and
+in a pleasant drive with our host in the early morning
+had some slight outlook on umbrageous Long
+Island. "<i>O! si angulus iste!</i>" It is 115 miles long
+and 14 miles broad, and quite big enough for me!
+And there be deer in the woods and trout in the rivers,
+and fish in all the creeks, and game in the wooded
+lagoons, and forest, lake, and civilised life, and many
+things to please the eye; and then the comet was so
+good as to display his glories and his tail before
+Glen Cove. But our time of departure from the States
+was drawing near, and there were still things to be
+done in New York, and many engagements to be kept,
+ere we started on our homeward journey on July 2nd;
+and at 12.35 on the 30th June the Duke and I took
+the "cars" at a rural station, and reached New York
+at 2.35, in time for a run through Tiffany's and some
+little shopping and visiting. There was a dinner
+arranged by "Uncle Sam" at "Sutherland's" in
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_139" id="Page_139">139</a></span>
+honour of the famous city restaurant. The house is
+one of a type which has, I believe, disappeared in the
+"City," where once flourished famous establishments
+such as Williams' Beef Shop in the Old Bailey, Dolly's
+in Paternoster Row, the Billingsgate Fish Ordinary,
+Jacquet's, &amp;c., like it in character. Great New Yorkers
+do not disdain to cross the threshold, within which
+they find admirable fare and excellent wines&mdash;the
+national delights of clam chowder, clam soup, soft-shell
+crabs, and many other Transatlantic delicacies&mdash;at
+the far end of Broadway, still holding its own against
+the fashionable restaurants. Of the party who dined
+there with Chancellor Robertson and others in 1861,
+only "Uncle Sam," Mr. S. Barlow, and I survive; but
+the host, a granitic sort of man, with a kindly Scottish
+heart warming the case inside, seems capable of
+presiding over his feasts for another generation.</p>
+
+<p><i>July 1st.</i>&mdash;It was difficult to realise the idea that
+this was our last day in America, but the truth was
+forced on us by the practical duties of getting the
+baggage ready and settling up generally, ending with
+a dinner at the Turf Club, where we met Mr. Keene, of
+Foxhall fame, who had also entertained us at Newport,
+Mr. Jerome, Mr. Stuart, Mr. Travers, and other
+fathers of the New York sporting world, which seems
+very like our own, and had to drink madeira of all but
+fabulous antiquity and excellence.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_140" id="Page_140">140</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VII.<br />
+RETURN TO EUROPE.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+The "<i>City of Berlin</i>"&mdash;The Inman Line&mdash;The Service at Roche's
+Point&mdash;Queenstown Discomforts&mdash;A sorry Welcome Home.
+</p>
+
+<p><i>July 2nd.</i><a name="FNanchor_B" id="FNanchor_B" href="#Footnote_B" class="fnanchor">[B]</a>&mdash;Up at 5.30. The Duke, Lady Green,
+Sir Henry, Mr. Wright, Edward, all engaged in the
+transport department, with Mr. Trowbridge in observation;
+incessant activity. The Queen Anne coach
+was in readiness at 7.30, and in half an hour more we
+were discharged at the Inman wharf. There was
+a great flotilla&mdash;five large steamers leaving at the
+same period for Liverpool, and there was the usual
+throng at the landing-places of friends to bid "good-bye"
+to those who were about to cross the Atlantic.
+The steamer we had selected belonged to the Inman
+line, and whatever there may have been wanting to
+the eye on board, compared to the trimness and paint
+of the Cunard steamers, there was nothing to regret
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_141" id="Page_141">141</a></span>
+in our accommodation or service. There were so many
+passengers that the dining-saloon, illuminated by the
+electric light&mdash;which was also used for the purpose of
+lighting the engine-room and the lamps in the
+corridors&mdash;would not contain them all at the same
+time, and so there were two messes for dinner. Epergnes
+filled with the most beautiful flowers were ranged in
+order, and a rampant war-steed composed of white
+roses was displayed on the table. I am not about
+to give a log-book, or to trespass on the patience of
+my readers by an account of such an ordinary event
+as a passage home. The second day after we left New
+York was the anniversary of Independence, July 4th,
+and the day was duly celebrated by the citizens of the
+United States, who constituted the large majority of
+our fellow-passengers. The "stars and stripes" were
+hoisted at the main, and the cabin was draped with
+British and American flags. But there was no
+speechifying, and the spread-eagle was content with
+moderate flights; a recitation and a song or two, and
+the fire of champagne corks, being the only indications
+of an extraordinary festivity.</p>
+
+<p>About this time of the year the Atlantic, in the latitudes
+which we traverse, is rather vexed of fogs; and
+if one be disposed to low spirits, I know nothing which
+weighs upon him more than the sound of the fog-horn.
+But what must it be for the captain, who is perforce
+obliged to go at full speed, or as near to it as he
+can, with the expectation every moment of some startled
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_142" id="Page_142">142</a></span>
+cry from the bow "Sail right ahead!" Nor is it quite
+out of the running that an iceberg may be taking a
+sail across his course. Fortunately we had no experiences
+of the kind; and as night was falling on the
+10th July land was in sight.</p>
+
+<p>The lights of the Fastnet were seen through drifting
+haze, and about 10 o'clock at night the "<i>City of
+Berlin</i>" steamed through a rising sea, with a strong
+beam wind, into the roadstead of Roche's Point,
+burned her rockets, and laid-to for the steamer to
+take the mails, and those passengers who had decided
+to land, on shore.</p>
+
+<p>It was blowing freshly, and rain fell heavily; and
+as we looked down from the lighted decks on the
+murky water, and made out the tug as she paddled up
+to us, rising and falling on the waves, we were seized
+with reasonable misgivings as to the propriety of
+leaving our ship and taking to such a craft. I am
+bound to say that our experience more than amply
+justified them.</p>
+
+<p>I am writing these lines with a very faint hope
+that any amendment will be introduced, in consequence
+of what I say, into the abominable service between the
+American vessels off Roche's Point and Queenstown.
+In fine weather and in daylight it is not of much
+consequence, perhaps, what discomfort one may be
+exposed to in a short passage to the shore; but to
+affront women and children with the misery which
+must be experienced at night time and in bad
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_143" id="Page_143">143</a></span>
+weather, in the steamers employed in the service,
+is little short of barbarous, if it be not indeed altogether
+so.</p>
+
+<p>After I had got down upon the deck of the little
+steamer and surveyed the scene around me, I thought
+that it would have been much wiser to have gone on
+with my friends to Liverpool; but I had some engagements
+in Ireland, and so had the experience I was glad
+not to share with my fellow-passengers, on whom I
+should have liked the old country to have made a
+favourable impression. There was the great steamer,
+with hundreds of waving hands, and the sound of
+friendly voices bidding us "God speed," a blaze of
+lights, and almost as steady as the solid earth, as the
+horrible little tug puffed away, and, getting from
+under her lee at once, encountered the swell. If she
+could have ridden over the water below, she certainly
+could not escape that which came down from above;
+so that we were all pretty wet and cross and miserable
+in the half-hour which elapsed before we reached the
+shore. Fortunately, there were not many passengers
+who availed themselves of the opportunity; but the
+deck of the steamer was crowded by poor people
+returning to their native country. Accommodation
+for the cabin passengers, except seats on the wet and
+sloppy decks, there was none. There was a little
+cabin, stuffy and comfortless, and moreover occupied
+by a couple of women who had come out to see friends
+by way of a pleasure excursion, and who were suffering
+the last extremities of sea-sickness. The spray
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_144" id="Page_144">144</a></span>
+broke over the luggage and passengers; it was in such
+circumstances that the custom-house officers began
+their search. One of them, opening my bag, which
+was unlocked, found a small revolver. It was unloaded,
+and there was no ammunition for it; but,
+nevertheless, it was seized, for I was "importing arms
+into a proclaimed district without licence." A similar
+mishap occurred to a Spanish officer, who was not
+quite so easily appeased as I was by the assurance
+that the arm would be given up on proper application
+to the police. His revolver, he insisted, was part of
+his uniform, a necessity of his existence, and the
+authorities might as well seize his epaulettes or spurs.
+However, my deadly weapon was restored to me some
+days afterwards, after a correspondence with the custom-house,
+and I dare say the Hidalgo was equally
+fortunate. These were incidents to denote that we
+were in the midst of trouble. There was but a sorry
+welcome for us when we landed at Queenstown. Not a
+car to be found, that I could see; but there were a few
+porters, and the agent of the hotel at the pier; and,
+commending my luggage to his care, I walked to the
+establishment. It surely cannot be quite an unaccustomed
+event for a steamer to arrive at Queenstown at
+that time of night! The last train for Cork had gone;
+and it might have been expected that lighted rooms
+and some sort of preparation would have awaited
+the travellers; for every vessel that touches at Queenstown,
+coming from America, surely lands a few people
+needing rest and refreshment? A demoralised waiter,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_145" id="Page_145">145</a></span>
+who appeared to think that such a thing had never
+happened in the whole course of his experience, as
+the inroad of ten or twelve people asking for supper
+and bedrooms, informed us that nothing could be done
+until the gentleman who represented the hotel at the
+landing-place had arrived; and so we sat on the stairs
+for half an hour, and were then shown into a gaunt
+room, dimly lighted by gas. There was nothing
+ready. The hungry people, by dint of patience and
+perseverance, eventually succeeded about midnight in
+obtaining some poor substitute for supper and scrambled
+to their beds.</p>
+
+<p>I mention the circumstances in which my fellow-passengers
+and I were landed at Queenstown, that
+those who are interested in promoting the welfare of
+the port, and in making the route through Ireland less
+thoroughly objectionable, may take steps to obviate
+the great inconvenience to which travellers at present
+are certainly exposed.</p>
+
+<p>Next morning I reached Mallow. I was but a few
+hours in the "distressful country," but I found that
+things had gone from bad to worse while we were in
+the States. I heard from my fellow-travellers in the
+train that "Boycotting" had attained such a pitch in
+the South, that all the relations and conditions of
+social life were exposed to peril, if not destruction.
+And still, with the usual cheerfulness of Irish landlords,
+accustomed, as it were, to these excesses of the
+popular will, my informants talked of hunting, fishing,
+and shooting; and I heard full accounts of the state of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_146" id="Page_146">146</a></span>
+the rivers, and of the take of fish which had made some
+of them happy. The County Cork, indeed, had nearly
+a parallel in the "wild West." But what a contrast
+between the state of public feeling, in respect to the
+outrages which were perpetrated in each, in the country
+we had left, and that to which I had returned! In
+the United States there was no attempt to justify the
+men who were guilty of such deeds. In Ireland it
+was impossible to obtain evidence or to convict the
+offenders. I am not going to close this narrative of
+our little excursion with a political disquisition, indeed
+I have not the materials for forming any opinion respecting
+the breadth and depth of what may be called
+the Irish national movement in the United States;
+but there seems to be a general vague impression in
+America that as the British Government was not very
+wise and equitable in its dealings with the people of
+the thirteen colonies in the reign of King George, it
+is, somehow or other, at the present moment, treating
+with harshness and injustice the whole of the Irish
+race in Ireland. It is impossible not to recognise the
+fact that the head, perhaps the heart, and certainly
+the purse of this development of Irish discontent are in
+the United States. The arms, the body, and the legs
+are in Ireland. During the whole time of our visit,
+although we visited towns where eminent orators were
+lecturing upon Irish subjects, and where representatives
+of the League were in session, there was not a
+trace brought home to us of the strong sympathy which
+undoubtedly exists in many American cities with the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_147" id="Page_147">147</a></span>
+movement in Ireland. There were accounts of the
+meetings in the newspapers, and now and then a few
+leading articles on the subject; but we might have
+concluded, from what we saw and heard generally,
+that the Irish question was of far less importance to
+the American people than the religious views of Colonel
+Ingersoll, or the discussions between the railway companies
+respecting their fares. The recital of wrongs,
+most of which have been long ago redressed, still
+reaches the ear and touches the heart of the American
+public, and if the Irish population had not in many
+ways provoked or excited the antagonism of the native
+Americans in the towns, and of the Teutonic element
+which exercises such a powerful influence in the
+country, there would be far greater sympathy for the
+supposed oppression of the Sister Island by England.
+The fact that emigrants come from Europe is accepted
+as a proof that the countries which they leave are ill-governed;
+and Americans, in dealing with the emigration
+question, are apt to forget the existence and nature
+of the forces which induced their own ancestors to seek
+homes in the New World.</p>
+
+<p>The <i>New York Times</i> declared in an article last
+June, that there is no essential difference between the
+two divisions of the Irish in America and of the Irish
+in Ireland. The voyage across the Atlantic works no
+transformation in Pat, and he is still as much an
+Irishman after his plunge into an alien civilisation
+and taking out his papers as when he stood on the old
+sod in Meath or Tipperary. "He cares no more for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_148" id="Page_148">148</a></span>
+the American eagle than for an owl; but a sprig of
+shamrock stirs him to ecstasy. The name of Washington
+has no meaning for his ear; but that of St. Patrick
+is a living and potent reality." That statement, however,
+must be taken with qualification. There are
+to-day 90,000 acres of land in Minnesota as thoroughly
+Irish as if they were planted in the centre of Connaught.
+There are Pats and Pats. Many of the
+most wealthy and prosperous merchants, bankers, and
+landowners whom we met in the West were not merely
+of Irish extraction, but born Irishmen, and the extraordinary
+spectacle of Irish millionaires who knew how
+to keep their money, and to add to it, too, may be seen
+in San Francisco and elsewhere in the West. Many,
+less fortunate, have high positions either in the army, or
+as politicians, or in the estimation of all that is great
+and good in America&mdash;such as Mr. O'Conor&mdash;men who
+have held aloof from politics, and who could not be
+tempted, even by the Presidentship, to enter the arena
+of party strife. One convicted rebel of 1840 now
+occupies a leading place at the American bar. I heard
+him denounce the Land Bill in terms he might have
+used in denouncing the atrocities of the Saxon in his
+hot days when O'Connell was king. The influence
+which has been acquired in many parts of the Union
+by the Irish immigration and by the descendants of
+immigrants has naturally excited at various times the
+opposition and indignation of the American born, and it
+has always been more or less opposed by the Teutons
+of different nationalities who occupy such a powerful
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_149" id="Page_149">149</a></span>
+position in all the great States of the West. But "the
+Native Party" is now either dead or sleeping. A very
+distinguished officer and politician said to me that he had
+at one time been a most eager and ardent adherent of
+the policy of the Native American Party, but that when
+he saw how earnestly and devotedly the Irish had come
+forward in defence of the Union, how brilliantly they had
+fought, and how recklessly they had sacrificed their lives,
+in 1861, he felt constrained to abandon his principles,
+and to admit their free right to all the privileges of
+American citizenship. I could not, however, but recollect
+that General Richard Taylor, in his most
+amusing, able, and graphic work on that same war,
+from the Confederate side of the question, bore the
+strongest testimony to the services of the Irish in the
+army which fought under the banner of the Slave
+States. In New York and in San Francisco the Irish
+element has exercised almost supreme control in municipal
+matters, and it may be said, without offence I
+hope, that, whether it be owing to the opposition they
+have encountered or to a radical deficiency which may
+be Irish rather than Celtic, their management has
+not conduced to the comfort of the cities or to the
+pecuniary purity of the Executive. In San Francisco
+there is a strong anti-Irish press and much anti-Irish
+feeling. The 'Argonaut' repudiates the thraldom
+of the Irish associations and factions in the Far West
+as strenuously as the 'Times' and 'Tribune' do in the
+East. But notwithstanding all that may be written
+and done, it is impossible to resist the influence of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_150" id="Page_150">150</a></span>
+numbers under a system of suffrage so large as that
+which exists in the greater number of the American
+States. It was curious to read in a Californian paper
+an appeal to England to suppress Irish agitation.
+"We confidently believe," says the <i>Argonaut</i>, "that
+the wisdom of its public men, the healthful condition
+of its public opinion, and the strength of its military
+power will be sufficient to crush out the Land League
+movement, which is but incipient rebellion. That
+England will deal justly, firmly, and successfully with
+this effort of united ecclesiasticism and Communism is
+the earnest wish of every intelligent and independent
+mind that believes in free government, the guarantees
+of property, the rights, and the personal liberty of man."
+However, there are American parties, if not statesmen,
+whose wishes are by no means directed to such a consummation,
+and we must take note of the fact.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_151" id="Page_151">151</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER VIII.<br />
+SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Education&mdash;Free Schools&mdash;Influence of Money in Politics&mdash;Corruption
+in Public Life&mdash;Crime on the Western Borders&mdash;The Great
+Rebellion&mdash;Anniversaries&mdash;Great courtesy to strangers&mdash;Manners
+and Customs.
+</p>
+
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poem">
+<p class="o1">"Westward the course of Empire takes its way;</p>
+<p class="i1">The four first acts already past,</p>
+<p>A fifth shall close the drama with the day,</p>
+<p class="i1">Time's noblest offspring is the last."</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>The "tar-water Bishop of Cloyne" would have been
+exceedingly astonished could he have seen the first
+line of his prophecy or averment made to do duty as a
+motto to Mr. Bancroft's History of the United States;
+but surely if the prophecy be not realised, it will be
+the fault of the agencies engaged in working it out&mdash;never
+in the history of mankind, as we know it, have
+such advantages been enjoyed by any nation as have
+been, and are, the appanage of the Americans of
+European origin in the New World. They have
+leaped into the possession of their heritage full armed,
+like Minerva from the brain of Jove. For them have
+all the champions of human rights died or conquered,
+and the protagonists of human struggles for liberty
+and light fought. For them Science has trimmed her
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_152" id="Page_152">152</a></span>
+lamp&mdash;for them martyrs have died&mdash;for them Europe
+and Asia have been in toil and travail for countless
+generations, and they have been guided across the
+sea to a grand continent where it would seem as if
+Nature had been engaged for myriads of ages to provide
+for their happiness and grandeur&mdash;all climes and
+all products are theirs&mdash;the bounteous plain, the ore-filled
+mountain, the treasures of the deep, the heaven-made
+ways by lake and river, and it would be a
+despair for all mankind if they misuse their glorious
+inheritance, and if all the nations of the world see
+that the pillar of fire in the west was but an <i>ignis
+fatuus</i> dancing before their aching eyes in a Serbonian
+bog of creeds and 'isms, of factions and faiths, all
+struggling towards the gate of the Temple of Mammon.
+"Philosophers," in all the doubts and fears
+which the condition of the Republic inspires at times,
+cling with confidence to the palladium which is, they
+think, to be found in the system of education based
+on the free schools of the States. If there were not a
+distinction between knowledge and morality, they
+would be justified; but the Evil One tempted us to
+eat of the fruit of the tree which brought sin into the
+world, and if Americans are to be trusted as authorities,
+the result of the largest and most liberal system of
+education ever devised is not as happy in practice as
+it ought to be according to theory.</p>
+
+<p>As the central Government extended its sway over
+the Territories there was a uniform system, when assigning
+land for public objects to railway companies, of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_153" id="Page_153">153</a></span>
+retaining for the School Fund a portion of the land in
+each Territory, as it was settled and admitted as such,
+under the control of the central Government. In the
+States Constitutions creating Sovereign States, there
+are provisions inserted, varying very little in language
+and not at all in spirit, which render it compulsory
+on the Legislature of each State to maintain public
+schools free to all the children of the people residing
+within its borders. Another principle, of universal
+application, provided that all schools under public
+control should be free from sectarian or denominational
+teaching, in the schools or in the books used for educational
+purposes. With such safeguards for the extension
+of education, it is depressing to find that, in
+certain districts at all events, crime and immorality
+prevail in the United States as extensively as in the
+benighted kingdoms of the Continent of Europe. But
+the most serious consideration in connection with the
+system of common schools in America, is the fact that
+serious doubts are intruding themselves respecting the
+success of it. In a recent official report it was stated
+that whereas the children who ought to go to school
+numbered about fourteen and a half millions, the
+average attendance was not more than five millions.
+But, assuming that all the children went to school,
+there are people who declare that the education given
+under the National system is by no means satisfactory.
+Mr. R. G. White affirms that the system is a failure;
+and high authorities assert that "any comparison between
+the results obtained in the public schools of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_154" id="Page_154">154</a></span>
+New York, Cincinnati, and Boston, with those of such
+public grammar schools of England, as Bedford, Manchester,
+and the City of London, is simply ridiculous."
+The teachers are continually shifting, and when the
+teachers, as they do in this land of liberty, go away,
+the schools are deserted, the constant services of a staff
+cannot be retained unless there is very considerable
+increase in the rate of payment now made to the male
+and female teachers. None of these in any State have,
+I think, more than about 9<i>l.</i> per month. Mr. White
+says that "the mass of the pupils of the public schools
+are unable to read intelligently, to spell correctly, to
+write legibly, to describe the geography of their own
+country, or do anything that reasonably well educated
+children do with ease; and they cannot write a simple
+letter, they cannot do readily a simple sum in practical
+arithmetic, they cannot tell the meaning of any but
+the commonest of words they read and spell so ill.
+They can give rules glibly, they can recite from
+memory, they have some dry knowledge of the various
+ologies and osophies, they can, some of them, read a
+little French or German with very bad accent; but, as
+to all real education, they are as helpless and as
+barren as if they had never crossed the threshold of a
+schoolhouse." It is from American writers that these
+accusations against the common school system are to
+be gleaned. Some statisticians say that crime and
+pauperism are increasing far more rapidly than population.
+The charge on the State for punishing criminals
+and keeping paupers last year was $20,000,000, or
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_155" id="Page_155">155</a></span>
+£4,000,000; but it is too much to attribute crime and
+pauperism to the defects of the schools. It might
+with more reason be argued that the teaching of the
+people in the schools tends to develop the looseness
+and eccentricity of thought, where there is no religious
+teaching, which are exemplified in the uprising of extraordinary
+sects and strange philosophies; for America
+is the land of spiritualists, mesmerism, soothsaying,
+and mystical congregations. Mr. Hepworth Dixon
+may not be a perfectly unimpeachable authority on
+the subject of the number of spiritualists in America;
+but there can be no question they are to be counted by
+millions. It is averred that believers in spirits generally
+believe in "special affinities which imply a spiritual
+relation of the sexes higher and holier than that of
+marriage." It is not wonderful then that there should
+be also a very large number of divorces, especially
+in the New England States. Mr. Nutting says that
+"in the history of nations there has never but thrice
+occurred such a breaking up of the family tie as is
+now taking place, especially in Rhode Island and Connecticut,
+among the people of New England blood."
+Mormonism, although of American origin and early
+growth, has been mainly successful by the constant
+importation of ignorant peasants from Europe.</p>
+
+<p>There is a want of reverence on the part of children
+towards their parents which is very striking. Americans
+who have admitted and deplored this have sought
+to account for it by the school system, wherein the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_156" id="Page_156">156</a></span>
+State usurps the place of the parent, and teaches the
+young idea to mock at any authority but that of the
+schoolmaster. It would be lamentable to have to
+admit that free education is associated with the
+weakening of parental influence. Theoretically, there
+is nothing in the American system to prevent the
+teaching of religious and moral duties by parents at
+home; but it would seem as if very little of that kind
+of instruction was given by the busy fathers and
+anxious mothers of the Republic, and that when the
+day's work is done at school, and some time given to
+the preparation of the studies for the day to follow,
+there is no further teaching.</p>
+
+<p>I do not think the rule "By their fruits shall ye
+know them" can be applied to the public schools, in
+connection with the prevalence of crime, immorality,
+unbelief, or eccentric religion. But it is certain the
+system has not by any means secured that high level
+of general education, or what education is supposed to
+bring with it, which its friends claim for it in the
+States. There is reason to believe that the standard
+of morality has not been uniformly high in the political
+world, and that in the public intelligence the judiciary
+does not aspire to an absolute immunity from suspicion.
+Even in the old settled States, legislators from
+time to time may be found, who, seated among the
+good and wise, excite admiration akin to that which is
+aroused by the spectacle of a fly in amber. It has
+been observed by travellers that whatever affection
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_157" id="Page_157">157</a></span>
+may exist in families, it does not attain that keen
+sensibility and lasting power which is found in French
+domestic life.</p>
+
+<p>When American newspapers of the greatest influence
+and circulation write invectives against the corruption
+which prevails in places high and low, when writers
+of great intelligence and known character contribute
+similar articles to periodicals which possess the highest
+position in the literary world of America, a stranger
+may be permitted perhaps to say a few words respecting
+the impression produced upon his mind by what
+he heard and read on the subject when he was in the
+country, without it being alleged that he attempts to
+assail the principles of free government, or to make
+invidious charges or wholesale accusations against a
+nation. I know too well the force with which Americans
+could retort if they were so minded, and how
+they could point to the reports of election judges
+which set forth the prevalence of extensive bribery,
+led to the suspension of writs, and will perhaps end in
+the disfranchisement of some ancient and populous
+boroughs and constituencies in England, and to the
+speeches of Sir Henry James in Parliament, to cast
+any stone out of my glass house on that score; but I
+do not think it can be established that persons in a
+position at all analogous to that of the members of
+a State Legislature have been purchased wholesale in
+England, Ireland or Scotland, or that even a complete
+Borough Corporation had been bought up. Now,
+nothing was more common in the Far West than to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_158" id="Page_158">158</a></span>
+hear it stated openly that Senator So-and-so had
+bought his place, and that Mr. So-and-so had purchased
+a State Legislative body in order to "get
+through" some railway or other scheme. That was
+accepted in fact as a matter of course, and not contradicted
+or questioned by any one. We heard from
+time to time of the sums which So-and-so would
+expend to buy his senatorship, and of the money
+actually paid to secure the passage of a line from the
+legislature of O&mdash;&mdash; and the like, whilst stories relating
+to the purchase of judges were common in the conversation
+of the hotels and cars.</p>
+
+<p>I do not aver that these stories were true. I only
+know that they passed current and were not challenged
+by those who were around us. "Thoughtful persons,"
+who exist in the United States as well as in the
+vicinity of Pall Mall clubs, lament, deplore and hate the
+evils of growing corruption with all the fervour of
+honest and powerless natures. The mechanism is
+scarcely concealed. It stands before the world with less
+attempt at disguise than the gallows in the gaol. Mr.
+Parton, in the 'North American Review' of this July,
+writing on the power of public plunder, says: "At
+present, in the ninety-fifth year of the Constitution,
+we are face to face with a state of politics of extreme
+simplicity, of which money is the motive, the means and
+the end. What was the last Presidential election but a
+contest of purses? The longest purse carried the day,
+and it carried the day because it was the longest.
+Some innocent readers perhaps have wondered why the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_159" id="Page_159">159</a></span>
+famous orators who swayed vast multitudes day after
+day and night after night, have not been recognised in
+the distribution of office. They were paid in cash from
+ten dollars a night to a thousand dollars a week." And
+then he goes on to describe the business in detail, and
+to show what this power is. He says: "There is a
+boss in the city of New York who will take a contract
+for putting a gentleman into Congress. Pay him so
+much and you may go to sleep, wake up and find yourself
+member elect. A boss is a man who can get to
+the polls on election days masses of voters who care
+little or nothing for the issues of the campaign and
+know of them still less. They operate upon the
+strangers in the land who are unable to use its
+language and are unacquainted with its politics."
+Mr. Parton describes with humour one of these
+"bosses," an improvement on the pugilists and cormorant
+thieves of a remote period. "The Emerald Isle
+gave him birth; the streets of New York, education.
+To see the brawny, good-tempered Irishman walking
+abroad in his district when politics are active is to get
+an idea of how the chief of a clan strode his native
+heath when a marauding expedition was on foot. He
+lives in a handsome house, and has more property than
+any man has ever been able to get by legitimate service
+to the United States. He treats his dependants and
+retainers nobly, but as the agent and organiser of
+spoliation he is a prey to every minor scoundrel, for
+at certain seasons he dare not say no to any living
+creature. And yet it requires tact, self-possession
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_160" id="Page_160">160</a></span>
+and resource to move about among needy people with
+a pocket full of money, an embodied "yes," and have
+some of it left after the election. The strikers, as
+they are called, go for solid cash now instead of target
+companies and clambakes for which the candidates
+paid the bills." "Money, money," exclaims Mr. Parton,
+"everywhere in politics, in prodigal abundance, money,
+except where it could secure and reward good service
+for the public, hecatombs for the wolves, precarious
+bones for the watchdogs." The details in the article
+are precise, and if they are to be trusted it may be
+doubted whether the claims of the United States to
+possess a cheap government can be maintained, for it
+is not cheap to pay responsible executive officers a
+precarious pittance per annum if now and then it costs
+a million dollars to change them. Mr. Secretary Blaine
+has thrice declared that the election in October 1880
+in the State of Maine, a model New England State,
+was carried by money. His opponents declared that
+he and his party were as bad, and that they too
+flooded the towns with money. What renders the
+situation more dangerous is the fact that the men who
+provide the money for running these enormously expensive
+political combinations are either seekers after,
+or holders of, office, and the inference is that they seek
+to control Government, or, as Mr. Parton puts it, that
+"the Government is coming to be rather an appendage
+to a circle of wealthy operators than a restraint upon
+them." That is indeed a serious proposition, and the
+result of observation goes to support the idea that it
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_161" id="Page_161">161</a></span>
+is valid. The small man is in office, but the big man,
+his master, is outside. The mischief is brought prominently
+forward in connection with the sale of public
+lands in the North-West, which have been claimed as
+the heritage of the people, and indeed of all the
+nations of the world. The government land attracted
+the hardy labour of all countries, covering the western
+west with thriving towns and populous counties. But
+now the prairies are skinned by rich men, by "land-grabbers,"
+people who buy up tracts of twenty thousand
+or thirty thousand acres wherever they can lay their
+hands upon them, evading the law and filling the
+western world with roving labourers who work on
+these prodigious farms in summer and starve in winter.
+This is, we are told, the result of "government by
+lobby."</p>
+
+<p>Occasionally there is an exceeding great and bitter
+cry over all this from the depths of the body politic.
+Some great paper in a moment of deep mental agony
+publishes an article like that, to which I have called
+attention, by Mr. Parton; occasionally some preacher,
+nobly daring, thinks it necessary to direct attention,
+from his pulpit, to the progress of corruption. Dr.
+Talmage delivered a very remarkable discourse whilst
+I was in America on the text from Job. xv. 34: "Fire
+shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." Although
+I do not profess exactly to understand to what particular
+sect he belongs, he is one of the leaders of
+religious thought, dividing with Beecher and others
+the popular favour in the Empire City. The State
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_162" id="Page_162">162</a></span>
+buildings at Albany ought to be heavily insured if the
+reverend gentleman's vaticinations are right. It was
+an American discourse. I cannot give the whole
+oration. The people of the Brooklyn Tabernacle were
+presented with a muster-roll of the people who had
+distinguished themselves amongst the great ones of
+the world. Cobden, Brougham, O'Connell and Rowland
+Hill were placed in juxtaposition as leaders on our
+side of the water. Of course it was impossible to resist
+the allusion to Francis Bacon and to Macclesfield; but
+it was scarcely correct to say that the Lord Chancellor
+Whiteberry&mdash;I presume a misprint for Westbury&mdash;"perished,"
+nor do I quite understand what the preacher
+meant by the awful tragedy of the <i>Credit Mobilier</i>.
+Washington, Ben Butler, and John McClean were
+linked together for the benefit of Americans. They
+were, Dr. Talmage declared, great politicians, but "out
+of politics there has come one monstrous sin, potent
+and pestiferous, its two hands rotten with leprosy, its
+right hand deep in its breeches pocket. This is bribery."
+Dr. Talmage called upon the American people to judge
+the crime. "Under the temptation of this sin," he
+exclaimed, "Benedict Arnold sold the fort in the
+Highlands for thirty-one thousand three hundred and
+seventy-five dollars; Gorgy betrayed Hungary, Ahitophel
+forsook David, Judas killed Christ. I think," he
+says, "when I see the strong men who have gone
+down, of the Red Dragon in Revelation, having seven
+heads and ten horns, and seven crowns upon its head,
+drawing the third part of the stars of heaven after it."
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_163" id="Page_163">163</a></span>
+And therefore he proceeds to preach against bribery.
+He thought it was the right time, "because the Legislature
+in New York is busy in investigating charges
+of bribery. The whole country woke up in holy horror
+at the charge that two thousand dollars had been
+offered to influence a vote in the Legislature, as if
+this was something new; as though in one State nine
+hundred and seventy-five thousand dollars had not
+been paid a legislator of the State Government by a
+railway company to get its charter and secure a dedication
+of public lands; as though three-quarters of
+the legislators of the United States had not, through
+bribery, gone into putrefaction whose stench reached
+heaven. After a few weeks' hunting the squirrel has
+stolen the hickory nut. Gentlemen in New York hunt
+out wrong by day and play poker and old sledge at
+night at Delavan House. It was like the country
+which had spent six millions of dollars in lawsuits
+about William Tweed going suddenly into hysterics
+when it found out that he had stolen a box of steel pens.
+California is submerged in the grip of a great monopoly;
+in Kansas United States senators had been involved
+in charges of bribery; in Connecticut an election to
+Congress was bought as men might buy a box of strawberries.
+Last year they were convicted of attempting
+bribery in Pennsylvania, but the Court of Pardons
+liberated them with the exception of two judges, who
+were told that they would be cut off from political
+preferment for their obstinacy. A Pennsylvania United
+States senator used to put a price on legislators just
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_164" id="Page_164">164</a></span>
+as a Kentuckian puts a price on his horse." But it was
+not legislators alone that Dr. Talmage attacked. He
+declared that the railways, the common carriers of the
+country, were tainted by a favouritism which was, in
+fact, the result of bribery. One company made rebates
+in its fares to some favoured corporation, as in the case
+of a petroleum company, which was enabled to control
+the price of that light all over the world in consequence
+of a virtual monopoly that was given to it by arrangement
+with the railway. In the same way merchandise
+in grain, provisions, and cattle are placed in the hands
+of a few firms. "How much," asks Dr. Talmage, "did it
+cost the Elevated Railroad to keep the fare from dropping
+to five cents from ten cents? I have been told,"
+said he, "three hundred thousand dollars," which is
+60,000<i>l.</i> "Very seldom does a bill pass through any of
+our Legislatures if there be no money in it. Sometimes
+the bribery is in bank bills, sometimes in railroad
+passes, sometimes in political preferment, sometimes
+by the monopolies given to the legislators, what are
+called points, a corner, a flier, a cover, washing the
+street, salting down, ten up! If you want to know
+what these are, ask the bribed members at Albany and
+Harrisburg." Then he goes on, with some truth, to
+declare that the bribery begins far away behind all this;
+that it is really with the money subscribed for election
+expenses that the evil begins its course. "From the
+big reservoirs of subscribed election expenses the little
+rills roll down in ten thousand directions, and by the
+time the great gubernatorial, congressional, and presidential
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_165" id="Page_165">165</a></span>
+elections are over, the land is drunk with
+bribery." Perhaps it is quite as well that it is from
+an American orator and from an American writer such
+statements and such indictments proceed, rather than
+from a stranger like myself; but it is very clear that
+the evil which De Tocqueville indicated long ago has
+spread rather than diminished, and there is reason to
+think that it will do so until the public conscience of
+a great people is aroused to a sense of the enormity
+of the mischief. But it lies far down towards the base
+of the national institutions, and any attempt to extirpate
+it will fail until the doctrines of the "Spoils to
+the Victors" be rejected from the political catechism,
+and the interests of party made the means and not
+the end of political life.</p>
+
+<p>The letters which appeared in the <i>Morning Post</i>,
+written under the influence of the surprise and anger
+I felt at the extent and impunity of crimes of violence
+and the state of feeling, or want of it, respecting them
+in the West, were badly received in America, and
+were severely handled by a few papers, as I was
+informed; I expected that the mention of the subject
+would not prove agreeable, though I guarded
+myself most sedulously from a single offensive word&mdash;nay,
+went out of my way to palliate the offences
+against life and living, and to excuse the people
+who allowed them, whilst I most carefully drew the
+line&mdash;a broad one&mdash;between these border ruffians and
+the law-abiding, virtuous people of the settled States.
+I was not, however, prepared for misrepresentation.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_166" id="Page_166">166</a></span>
+One would have thought that I accused the
+kind hosts who had received us&mdash;our generous entertainers
+in so many cities&mdash;the courteous, polished
+gentlemen who accompanied us&mdash;of murder and robbery,
+and ascribed to them the brutal murders committed
+by Canty or the Kid. As I quoted chapter
+and verse, and as the papers which vilified me could not
+deny the statements, they wrote that I had been imposed
+upon by the vivid fancy&mdash;in other phrase, the
+deliberate lying&mdash;of their brother editors in the West.
+One organ had the effrontery to declare that the Duke
+of Sutherland expressed his delight at the kind and
+courteous treatment of the ruffians I denounced;
+adding, "somebody lied&mdash;it was not the Duke." No.
+It was not indeed! A friend sent me one of these,
+and below an article in which it was said that I might
+take my place "beside Basil Hall, Mrs. Trollope, and
+Dickens for libelling the people of the United States,"
+and that my stories were all inventions, there was a
+pregnant commentary as follows:&mdash;"Sunday, July
+17th: Daring Train Robbery; Bandits Boarding
+Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Cars; The Conductor
+and a Passenger Shot Dead, and the Safe in
+the Express Car Robbed; the Passengers Saved by a
+Brakeman."</p>
+
+<p>I hope it will not be imagined that I have any
+desire to cast obloquy on the grand efforts, supremely
+successful as they have been, to turn the prairie and
+the desert to the uses of civilised man and of the
+world, and to open up the Western Continent to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_167" id="Page_167">167</a></span>
+humanity and civilisation. I am too sensible of the
+courtesy, ready service, and hospitality everywhere accorded
+to the party of English travellers of which I
+was one, to write one word which I thought calculated
+to give pain or offence to any of our many friends or
+to any right-minded American. <i>Maculæ solis!</i> 'Tis a
+pity they are there! In a few years, perhaps, the
+memory that such things were will have passed away
+like the recollection of some evil dream. But public
+sentiment must make itself felt, and above all there
+must be some abatement of the maudlin sympathy,
+which is virtually on the side of crime, if it be active
+in averting punishment.</p>
+
+<p>Crime in America, especially in the Eastern States,
+is very much the same as it is in other countries,
+but in the far West there is more recklessness in
+dealing with human life, which, in spite of the Howard
+Society and of humanitarians, I believe to be connected
+with the indulgence extended under State laws
+by American judges and juries to criminals who
+appear to be deserving of nothing but the strict and
+unmitigated application of the rope. "Property" is
+safe, for the citizens hunt down with extraordinary
+energy marauders whose object is simply plunder.
+Ordinary robbers and gangs of burglars are speedily
+and summarily suppressed. It is otherwise with those
+who assail life and limb. The desperadoes who infest
+the "saloons," as they are called, with which every
+western settlement is sure to be provided as soon as
+the shingle roofs are placed on the earliest upheaval
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_168" id="Page_168">168</a></span>
+of deal planks which can be called a dwelling, have
+far greater immunity and freedom than burglars or
+robbers. Wherever the train stopped for water on
+our journey in New Mexico, Western Colorado, or
+Eastern California, a rectangular wooden box, with
+a verandah, open doors, windows screened by a
+muslin curtain, perhaps a flagstaff with the Stars and
+Stripes flying, a large signboard, and some high-sounding
+name&mdash;the "Grand Alliance," "Union
+League," "El Dorado," "Harmonium," "Arcadia," or
+the like&mdash;was visible, with the usual group of booted
+and bearded miners, and their horses hitched up at the
+door-posts in front; inside you would be certain to
+find men of the same class at a bar, behind which,
+known for miles around, the affable Charlie, Bill, or Bob
+was dispensing drinks and mixing cocktails, slings, and
+the other drinks, in which the badness of the spirit is
+artfully disguised by a stimulant of a more active
+character and more pronounced flavour, known as
+"bitters," and kept in subjugation by the liberal use
+of ice. For even in these burning regions ice is
+stored up as the one thing needful. The rudest miner
+is accustomed to it; iced drinks are consumed by
+classes in America far below the social level of those
+who never taste them in this country.</p>
+
+<p>As the train was halting at Colorado Springs the
+stewards engaged in an animated discussion respecting
+a certain erection of poles and rafters just visible
+in an adjacent field. "I tell you dat's it." "I say
+tidn't." They were discussing the probability of the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_169" id="Page_169">169</a></span>
+scaffolding being the gallows whereon "Canty, the
+Buena Vista murderer," was to be hanged the day
+after. On April 29th, last year, Mr. Canty was
+standing on the platform in front of Lake-house
+with "Johnny the Ham," "Curly Frank," and "Off
+Wheeler," when Thomas Perkins appeared in an alley
+opposite, endeavouring "to induce 'Dutch Bill' to go
+with him to the office of Justice Casey, who had
+deputised him for the purpose." Canty and his companions
+at once ran across and demanded his release.
+Before Perkins could answer, Canty fired and missed
+him. The second shot wounded Perkins in the arm;
+the latter drew his pistol, but before he could use it
+Canty fired; the ball shattered the constable's hand.
+"For God's sake," he exclaimed, "is there no policeman
+to help me?" He fell, and Canty, walking close
+to his side, coolly sent a bullet through his body. He
+was arrested, tried, and convicted. His counsel applied
+to the Supreme Court for a <i>supersedeas</i>, but the court,
+after solemn argument, refused the application. Then
+they applied to the Governor of the State, but Mr.
+Pitkin, though "a weak-kneed man," would neither
+grant a reprieve nor a commutation to imprisonment
+for life. There was, he said, no ground "to set aside a
+verdict of a competent jury and the district judge
+reviewed and approved of by the Supreme Court." In
+the very last hour a woman came forward, and the
+Denver paper gave <i>verbatim et literatim</i> the text of the
+document in which ... "with dew regard," she offered
+Sheriff Spangler $50,000 (10,000<i>l.</i>) to save the life of
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_170" id="Page_170">170</a></span>
+W. H. Canty, her cousin, whose real name was, she said,
+N. H. Salisbury. "I entreat you to have him spared
+till you have an interview with me." She added that
+"Jennings and his brother in Leadville would pay a
+still larger sum. You may have ample means for
+life," &amp;c. A gentleman of the press, who came into
+our train at South Arkansas, was present at the execution.
+Just before the drop fell, Canty, who had expressed
+complete confidence in his ultimate liberation
+till the day before his execution, spoke for fifteen
+minutes, protesting his innocence. Then he exclaimed,
+"Good-bye, nothing can save me. I have faith in the
+Saviour and a hereafter." The trap was sprung, but
+to the horror of every one, the rope broke at the beam.
+The murderer's neck, however, was dislocated, and "a
+happy relief was experienced" when it was found he
+had died a painless death. As he was the nephew of
+an eminent statesman it was expected his friends would
+take action as to the disposal of his remains, which
+were put "in a neat casket at the sheriff's expense."
+In the journal there was a woodcut of the murderer.
+"Before his likeness could be taken holes were bored
+in the door and Canty was lashed to it, and then, when
+the door was set upright, the photographer watched a
+favourable opportunity when the head and eyes were
+quiet and secured the impression" from which the
+engraving was made. He was not so fortunate as
+Frank Gilbert, who was sentenced to be hanged the
+following day for a brutal murder, but respited, "in
+order that the proceedings may be reviewed by the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_171" id="Page_171">171</a></span>
+highest judicial tribunal," by Governor Pitkin at the
+last moment, "till July 29," the day on which Rosencrantz
+is now sentenced to be hanged. The sheriff,
+Judge Ward, the clerk of the court, and the prosecuting
+attorney joined with others in petitions to the
+governor on the ground that the Supreme Court judges
+had refused a <i>supersedeas</i> in consequence of the defects
+and informalities of the record of the proceedings in
+the court below. Rosencrantz was respited, and the
+public, who had been expecting a double execution on
+the 18th of June, were disappointed, although they
+were allowed to slake their curiosity by the sight of
+the condemned men and by testing the ropes in the
+prison enclosure where the scaffold was ready. In the
+paper which gave the text of Governor Pitkin's
+reprieve there was a heading "Done Brown. Al.
+Huggins, marshal of Recene, turns out a bad man.
+He shoots and fatally wounds officer Brown of Kokomo."
+Phil. Foote, constable of Kokomo, formerly marshal of
+Robinson, and Al. Huggins, marshal of Recene, it seems
+had spent the night in visiting the saloons of Kokomo,
+and in the early morning began to fire their pistols and
+guns off in the street, and continued to do so until
+Andy Sutton, marshal of Kokomo, attempted to arrest
+them, but failed, "as he was quickly covered by two
+rifles." Mr. Brown, a police officer, asked Huggins to
+put up his pistol, and, to encourage him, proceeded to
+pocket his own revolver, when Huggins took deliberate
+aim with a 38-calibre Colt and shot Brown in the left
+breast, just above the heart. Huggins and Foote
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_172" id="Page_172">172</a></span>
+started for Recene. The marshal of Kokomo followed
+quickly in pursuit, with a large body of men.
+Huggins refused to surrender, whereupon the marshal
+shot him in the face. As there was a movement to
+lynch him, Al. Huggins was sent under strong guard
+to Leadville, but Foote escaped. "Brown was not
+dead by last accounts, but was not expected to
+live long." Then came a long account of another
+"Denver tragedy. Charles Stickney murders Mr. T.
+Campan and Mrs. H. O. Devereux in a boarding-house."
+Stickney was nephew of ex-Governor Clifford, of Rhode
+Island, served as lieutenant, 20th Regiment, in the war
+of 1861-4, graduated at Harvard, became principal of
+a school, married a lady whom he sent to London to
+study music, and tried mining whilst his wife was
+giving music lessons in Denver. There she met Mr.
+Campan, one of the best families in Detroit; Stickney
+shot him and killed a woman who was in the room
+at the same time. "Public opinion is in favour of
+Stickney, and he will probably be reprimanded." The
+evening of the day we reached Leadville, "Alderman
+Johnnie M'Combe, a leading candidate for lieutenant-governor
+and mayor, and last spring before the people
+for city treasurer," shot and wounded, probably fatally,
+a well-known actor named James M'Donald, because the
+latter had taken some children in M'Combe's buggy for
+a drive. It is not easy to determine how far Johnnie's
+chance of office may be affected by this ebullition, but
+the newspapers did not write of it with harshness; one
+gave it a comic character by the heading, "Ex-Alderman
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_173" id="Page_173">173</a></span>
+M'Combe attempts to perforate Jemmy
+M'Donald's cranium." In my morning paper of the
+same date I find that "James Hogan was foully
+murdered by James M'Cue in the open streets of Erie
+this afternoon in a quarrel about a handkerchief;"
+that Dr. Flemings, a prominent citizen of Portland,
+Ashley County, Arkansas, had appeased a quarrel
+between a pedlar named Gillmore and a coloured man
+very effectually, for, "incensed by a remark made by
+the pedlar, the doctor drew a pistol and shot him
+dead;" that "a prominent business man of M'Leansboro'
+had made a sensation on the streets to-day by
+hunting up, pistol in hand, one of the gay Lotharios of
+Hamilton County;" that "Daniel Keller, deputy
+county clerk, was stabbed and killed in the street
+of Virginia City by Dennis Hennessy, a kerbstone
+broker;" that "a searching party under Captain
+Leper had overhauled Hamilton, Myers and Brown,
+the outlaws who shot Sheriff Davis and Collector
+Hatter at Poplar Bluff, Mo.; killed Hamilton, mortally
+wounded Myers, and made Brown a prisoner;" that
+"James Hurd shot Jeff Anderson at Alamosa, Col., and
+that it was feared the latter would not survive." An
+account of the death of "Curly Bill," a notorious
+desperado, leader of cowboys and murderer of Marshal
+White, who was killed at Caleyville, Arizona, by his
+comrade, Jem Wallace, followed. They had a quarrel
+(of course, in a saloon). After a few drinks "Curly
+Bill" said, "I guess I will kill you on general principles."
+Wallace stepped out of the saloon and immediately
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_174" id="Page_174">174</a></span>
+opened fire, inflicting a mortal wound on his
+foe. After a brief hearing Wallace was discharged,
+and left for parts unknown. Then it was related
+how "Thomas Clarey ('Tommy the Kid'), a Durango
+outlaw, was killed by a comrade named Eskridge at
+Annego while drunk." A fratricide and three trials for
+murder were duly recorded. Another paper gave an
+account of South-West Colorado from the lips of a
+recent visitor to San Juan County. "Are you going
+back to San Juan? No, I think not; but it is a
+glorious country. The men there are a little rough,
+and kill each other on slight provocation; but a peaceable
+man who does not swagger and blow is not molested.
+There is no law, and courts and constables are
+unknown." He narrates how Aleck &mdash;&mdash;, acting as a
+barkeeper, "a noble-hearted, jovial fellow, full of fun,
+who looked you square in the eye, owns mines, said
+to be worth a million," settled a difficulty; I am
+inclined to think Mr. Charles Klunk rather drew on
+the interviewing reporter of the <i>Globe Democrat</i>.
+He was, he said, going to see a stockman who lived
+about fifty miles from the house where he was
+visiting. A farmer said to him "Come and take a
+drink with me, and I'll show you the barkeeper who
+killed the man you are going to see an hour ago."
+The stockman had come into the saloon whilst Aleck
+was in the back room, and began to abuse him. Aleck
+heard him, opened on the man with a revolver, and
+"shot him full of holes. Next day I asked him what
+he was going to do about it, and he said he had been
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_175" id="Page_175">175</a></span>
+tried and acquitted, which meant that some of the
+leading men had told him that he had done right.
+There was no trial about it. When a man kills another
+out there in a fight they don't inquire very strictly
+into the circumstances, but make up their minds that
+they can't bring the dead man to life by hanging the
+killer, so nothing is done about it. But when a man
+murders another to rob him, the vigilants turn out
+and have no mercy on him. They just fill his skin
+with lead and tumble him into a hole like a wolf.
+After all, though the bears are plentiful in the
+spring, you can kill a deer 100 yards from the house
+where you like, the streams are alive with trout, the
+vegetables and crops splendid." Mr. Charles Klunk's
+resolution not to go back to this Happy Valley seems
+founded on sound constitutional principles. What I
+wish to point out is the condition in which the Central
+Government and State Governments have permitted
+many districts of New Mexico, Colorado, and California
+to remain. It is plain that the peculiar conditions
+under which the sway of the United States has been
+extended over the regions of the Far West have
+rendered it very difficult to establish the machinery
+for protecting life and property and punishing crime;
+but I do not see that the statesmen at Washington or
+the legislators at the State capitals are very much
+concerned at the reign of terror which prevails on the
+borders, or that they seek to impress on their people
+any regard for the sacredness of life. In fact, human
+life is almost a drug in the market. And I write
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_176" id="Page_176">176</a></span>
+fully sensible of the failures of our own and of all
+European Governments to repress crime, to prevent
+violence, and to ensure security to life and property.
+I am aware that Ireland and Poland are to the fore,
+and that wife-beating and "running kicks" illustrate
+the brutality of Lancashire and other districts&mdash;that
+London has its Alsatias, that every European capital
+has foul recesses in which the only laws are those
+of crime. All the world is busy preparing shoals of
+emigrants for the United States. It is only, however,
+when some savage outbreak affrighting the propriety
+of a great city arouses indignation and fear that there
+is a clamour for measures of repression. I do not
+think there is in any other part of the world, or
+that there ever has been in any civilised country,
+such shootings as have filled the land to which
+I allude with bloodshed. It may be said with
+truth that there never have been and that there are
+not any similar conditions in the world. But the
+absence of any great abiding movement for the correction
+and suppression of violence and lawlessness
+cannot be so readily accounted for or excused. There
+appears to be a sort of admiration for these border
+ruffians among portions of the American Press and
+public. Even a staid paper like the <i>Republican</i>, in
+an article headed "South-East Missouri: the Reign of
+Lawlessness about Ended," on the destruction of the
+New Madrid gang, writes of one who was sent to the
+penitentiary for thirty years "as a living monument
+of a bold and brave lot of desperate men who had
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_177" id="Page_177">177</a></span>
+started out to make money by robbing their fellow-men.
+This swift and stern justice speaks well for this
+portion of the States, which has had for a long time
+more than its full quota of these lawless characters.
+Myers and Brown will be hung on the 15th July, and
+their execution will be witnessed by thousands of South-East
+Missourians." The spectacle of the hanging will
+not do much good, if it be like the execution at Colorado
+Springs, which was advertised as a sort of picnic or
+pleasure excursion. One advertisement ran, "After
+the hanging to-morrow drink La Salle beer; it will cool
+your nerves." "Highway robbery here has about run
+its course, and the people are determined that lawlessness
+in those regions shall no longer go unwhipped
+of justice." Very good. But, why not sooner and
+long ago? "Rhodes was hung by Judge Lynch when
+captured at the killing of young Laforge in New
+Madrid;" but the gang killed the sheriff and wounded
+the deputy-sheriff and collector before the people arose
+in their majesty to squelch them. A criminal is invested
+with a notoriety which, next to popular estimation,
+is valued by some men, and it is noted with
+interest that "Gilbert" (one pitiless murderer) is a
+Catholic, and that "Rosengrants" (another homicide)
+"inclines towards the Episcopalians." A Leadville
+doctor visits one of them to ask for his body. "No,
+sirree, you can't have my body; I'll be hanged first!"
+And the public laugh at the lively sally, and admire
+the <i>sangfroid</i> of the wit! In fact, there is a
+<i>tendresse</i> for crime in this grim humour. A Texan who
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_178" id="Page_178">178</a></span>
+would "fill the skin" of a stranger "with lead" for
+aspersing Texas would no doubt heartily enjoy the
+description of the early population of the Lone Star
+State, which I quote from the Texas Press. "In the
+early days of the Republic, and even after annexation,
+many of the white men who came here had strong
+sanitary reasons for a change of climate, having been
+threatened with throat disease so sudden and dangerous
+that the slightest delay in moving to a new and milder
+climate would have been fatal, the subjects dying of
+dislocation of the spinal vertebræ at the end of a few
+minutes&mdash;and a rope. A great many left Arkansas,
+Indiana, and other States in such a hurry that they
+were obliged to borrow the horses on which they rode
+to Texas. They mostly recovered on reaching Austin,
+and many invalids began to feel better and consider
+themselves out of danger as soon as they crossed the
+Brancos River. Some who would not have lived twenty-four
+hours longer had they not left their homes reached
+a green old age in Western Texas, and were never again
+in risk of the bronchial affection already referred to by
+carefully avoiding the causes which led to their trouble.
+Some at Austin recovered so far as to be able to run for
+office, within a year, though defeated by a respectable
+majority, owing to the atmosphere and the popularity
+of the other candidate." The most extraordinary
+fact connected with the indulgence which is extended
+to Western excesses is the severity with which
+Northern and Eastern writers and publicists deal
+with the recklessness of Southerners with regard to
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_179" id="Page_179">179</a></span>
+life, as if it were a political question in some way
+connected with slavery. In an article on "Colonisation,"
+in the July number of 'The International
+Review,' there is an attempt to prove that the prevalence
+of homicide in the South as compared with the
+North has impeded the flow of immigrants, although
+slavery has disappeared, and the writer, quoting Mr.
+Redfield's book on 'Homicide North and South,' says
+the terrible "scourge of open murder, wholly irrespective
+of political causes more deadly than disease or
+yellow fever, because each death is the result of a
+heinous crime, seems to be calmly accepted by public
+opinion as a part of the unchangeable conditions of
+social life in the South. In Kentucky more men are
+killed in six days than in eight years in Vermont. In
+a village of Connecticut a death from homicide has
+never occurred from its foundation, while in one graveyard
+in Owen County, Kentucky, the majority are
+murdered men, and in another county forty-two persons
+were killed and forty-three wounded in two years."
+But in the very same number of the 'International'
+there is an account of the doings of the "Vigilance
+Committee" of San Francisco (where there were no
+slaves and where there is immense wealth), which
+might cause the author of the paper on "Colonisation"
+to reflect a little on his theories. Surely in
+Arizona, California, &amp;c., where the foreign population
+is 50 per cent. of the natives, immigration has not been
+checked by the prevalence of homicide? It must not
+be supposed that there is no "law" in the towns where
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_180" id="Page_180">180</a></span>
+these crimes have been committed; in all the cases
+referred to the coroner did his office and verdicts were
+returned, and it will have been seen that "wretches
+hang" in due course. We had intended to visit the
+State prison at Cañon City on our way to Pueblo from
+Leadville, where we were promised an opportunity of
+seeing "thirty murderers all in a row," but the delay
+of the train on the road deprived us of the means of
+verifying the statement, and I give it as it was made.
+It would seem as if the criminal supply were super-abundant,
+or that death on the gallows had no deterrent
+influence. The chances of escape are, if not
+numerous, at least considerable. At Deming, Denver,
+Leadville, Tucson, Tombstone, and other cities, the
+vast mass of the inhabitants are law-abiding, peaceable,
+honest, and honourable men, who feel as much
+horror at the violence and bloodshed around them as
+the most refined lady in any saloon of Boston, Paris, or
+London, but they appear to endure these things in
+the hope that the law will be enforced at last; now
+and then they break into vigilance committees and
+execute their own decrees, though the judges do not
+fail to lay it down that they have been accessories to
+murder. The great civiliser and police agent is the
+railroad. It is affirmed that as the iron way is pushed
+on the outlaws and the <i>personnel</i> of outlawry congregate
+at the terminal town, but I suspect that there is
+a fringe of the material left on the border as it runs.
+As our party were at dinner in the palace-car one
+evening the train pulled up at a station. There was a
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_181" id="Page_181">181</a></span>
+group of rough men on the platform, who stared in
+with all their eyes at the white tablecloth, set with
+bright glass and silver, and at the cheerful faces under
+the lamps. "How merry they are. I wonder if they
+know that this is Dodge City?" exclaimed one of the
+crowd. I was told by an official that when they were
+making a railway in these parts the surveyors, &amp;c.,
+were much troubled by gangs of gamblers and robbers,
+who impeded the work and debauched the men, so
+after due warning they made a razzia on the gamblers,
+shot a lot of them, and the rest "vamosed." There
+was not very long ago an actual war in the Grand
+Cañon Valley between the Atchison, Topeka, and
+Santa Fé Railway and the Denver and Rio Grande
+Railway, in which there was an array of armed forces
+and fighting on both sides, and we saw with our own
+eyes the remains of the breastworks cast up in the
+Grand Cañon by the belligerents. The law came in at
+last. "One side got at the judge first and gave him
+$50,000. The other was quite ready to go beyond
+that, but the first was too quick, and the suit went
+against the company." I was talking to a lawyer
+about the length of time which is allowed by the
+judges to criminals sentenced to death as a detail of
+the execution of the law not in accordance with the
+general practice of civilised nations, when one of the
+company remarked, "They must do it, sir, to please
+the people. If we had Judas Iscariot in gaol to-morrow
+there would be thousands of petitions to commute his
+sentence, and thousands of dollars ready for an appeal
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_182" id="Page_182">182</a></span>
+to the Supreme Court. Our people don't like prompt
+sentence." Nevertheless, sentence and execution are
+pretty swift when the desperadoes take the law into
+their own hands, as we have seen. The revolver and
+the "saloon" are the agents and the scene in most of
+these murders, and whisky is too often the motive power.
+In Kansas it is a criminal offence to sell any intoxicating
+spirit, or to use it except on medical certificate. It is
+said that the law cannot last, but it surely was a very
+strong conviction of the evils which were endured by
+the community that brought a State Legislature,
+elected by the people, to enact that beer, wine, and
+spirits should be absolutely and entirely banished from
+its borders. Lately there was a prosecution by the
+State attorney of a man for selling spirits. The case
+was clearly proved. The judge charged the jury in
+the strongest manner against the defendant. The jury
+without retiring at once found a verdict of "not guilty."
+"Boys," exclaimed the judge, putting his hand on the
+foreman's shoulder, "Boys, I'm quite with you." The
+Kansas case will be, I think, watched with great
+interest by the rival parties in England, and it is
+certainly worth investigation and attention, for, if all
+I hear be true here, a Parliament elected by the people
+either in advance or in the rear of their constituents
+have passed a law which judges condemn, and juries
+evade, and public opinion derides.</p>
+
+<p>From a British, which may be an unintelligent, point
+of view, there is a want of logical method in the treatment
+of the Great Rebellion question by Americans.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_183" id="Page_183">183</a></span>
+There is a general disposition to speak of the war
+between the Federal Government and the people of
+the Confederate States as an historical fact which has
+ceased to present burning controversies and terrible
+issues to the Republic. But, at the same time, these
+controversies are kept alive, and, for the defeated, are
+stirred up incessantly by anniversaries and celebrations,
+natural but, if it be the object of Americans, as many
+of them assure us it is, to let the memory of the past
+die out like that of a horrid dream, impolitic. The
+spirit which animated the Southern States is neither
+dead nor sleeping. But there are no end of G. A. P.
+and G. A. R. Associations flourishing their banners
+and waving their sheathed swords in and out of the
+newspapers, and it is almost more than Southern flesh
+and blood can bear at times to be reminded of the
+defeats they sustained, even if they be content to
+admit that the doctrine of the sovereignty of States
+was a delusion, and that the indivisibility of the
+Republic was a fundamental principle of the Constitution
+before it was conclusively established by force
+of arms.</p>
+
+<p>North and South, our good cousins are fond of
+anniversaries and speechmakings. I wonder where
+they get their taste for them from? Some few
+veterans dine together on anniversaries of old French
+war days, and there is a Balaclava Dinner in the Old
+Country; but, though we have a reasonably long list
+of fighting successes to commemorate, their anniversaries
+are mostly left to the almanacks. The other
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_184" id="Page_184">184</a></span>
+day the Americans had a celebration of the Battle of
+Cowpens, wherein the heroic Morgan gave the diabolical
+Tarleton the deuce of a whipping. I wonder if it was
+worth remembering? But it is better to remember
+such things perhaps than Sherman's Raid or Wilderness&mdash;or
+Chickahominy. There are bitternesses enough
+remaining&mdash;the rivalries and jealousies of generals are
+still active and these memories might be left to die
+out.</p>
+
+<p>The great war which so deeply moved the population
+of the United States has left many traces in Soldiers'
+Homes, and men deprived of legs or arms, or bearing
+marks of indelible wounds, are to be met with wherever
+there is any considerable gathering of people all over
+the Union. The clerk at the bar of the hotel, to
+whom we were talking a moment ago, was a captain in
+a regiment of militia, and served with distinction,
+having risen to the grade he occupies by conduct and
+courage during the war; and if he is known among
+his friends by the title of "Colonel," he deserves,
+probably, the brevet conferred upon him by the
+authority of the general public around him. The
+conductor of the train on the Pennsylvania Railroad,
+to whose attention we were so much indebted, was an
+ex-officer of volunteers, was engaged at the first battle
+of Bull Run, where he was wounded, and in several
+other actions. And our good friend the Major, who
+enabled us to pass many an hour listening to his
+admirable rendering of negro minstrelsy, bore in his
+body a proof of the dangers he had passed, in the shape
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_185" id="Page_185">185</a></span>
+of a Confederate bullet, or it might have been (for I am
+not quite sure now) a projectile of the Federal persuasion.
+And so on. Scarcely a day passed that we
+did not meet someone who had been fighting on one
+side or the other.</p>
+
+<p>One great change has come over Americans since I
+was last here, and, whether it was the ridicule to which
+they were exposed or to a sense of their greatness as a
+nation that it be due, it is to be commended. Except
+by a professional interviewer, not one of the party was
+asked, "What do you think, sir, of our country?"!</p>
+
+<p>The welcome which an Englishman who is entitled
+to admission into good society receives all over the
+States, in the best houses, and from the best men, is as
+gracious and warm as ever. It seems as if a reaction
+against the suspicion, jealousy, and harshness which
+marred the political relations of the Republic and Great
+Britain in times gone by, moved those who behave with
+so much courtesy to Englishmen, and that they seem to
+say, <i>sotto voce</i>, "Come and see how I forget the wrongs
+done to the United States by the Ministers of George
+III. and his successors! Admit that I can be as
+magnanimous as I am rich and cultivated! I am of
+your house, but I have transplanted all the good
+qualities of your race to American soil, and grafted
+them on the tree of liberty which towers aloft in all
+the splendour of Transatlantic luxuriance above us."
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_186" id="Page_186">186</a></span></p>
+
+<h2>CHAPTER IX.<br />
+THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.</h2>
+
+<p class="chapsum">
+Captain Pratt&mdash;Carlisle Barracks&mdash;An Indian Bowman&mdash;The Indian
+Question&mdash;The Pupils' Gossip&mdash;The "School News"&mdash;Indian
+Visitors&mdash;The White Mother&mdash;The India Office&mdash;White and Red&mdash;Quo
+Quousque?&mdash;Indian Title Deeds&mdash;The Reservations&mdash;The
+Indian Agencies&mdash;Missionary Efforts&mdash;The Red Man and the
+Maori.
+</p>
+
+<p>On the 5th of May the party visited Carlisle Fort or
+Barracks, one of the ancient military establishments
+of the Republic, where in the old times, speaking in
+an American sense, a considerable force was usually
+concentrated to keep watch and ward over the western
+frontiers, now extended thousands of miles away to
+the Pacific. The Barrack, which is a large quadrangle
+capable of containing a couple of regiments, is appropriated
+by the Government to this great experiment,
+the systematic education of the Indians of
+both sexes, whose families send them to school for the
+purpose of learning English and useful arts, mechanical
+and other, which may be of advantage to their people.
+It was, perhaps, one of the most interesting of the
+many little excursions which the Duke of Sutherland
+and his friends made in the States, and as it was the
+only one of the schools which we had an opportunity
+of seeing I shall proceed to give a little account of
+what we witnessed. In the first place let me express
+the sense which every one of us entertained of the real
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_187" id="Page_187">187</a></span>
+sterling qualities of Captain Pratt who is in charge of
+the school, and of the devotion and solicitude for
+their charges of those ladies employed in the training
+establishment. It may be asked how casual visitors
+could judge of these things? The discipline, order,
+progress, and perfect method visible in every room, and
+the intelligence and good understanding between the
+teachers and the pupils which could be perceived
+throughout the establishment, were adequate proofs, I
+think, that the praise is well deserved. At the time
+of our visit there were something under three hundred
+pupils, of whom perhaps two hundred were boys, and
+these were engaged in their class-rooms, each section
+of Indians being arranged according to nationality, if
+such a term can be used. But, indeed, the tribes of
+Indians differed from each other in personal appearance
+far more than do the races which inhabit the European
+continent. It is true they nearly all have straight
+wire-like black hair and eyes set deeply and rather
+obliquely in faces which are frequently of the Mongol
+type. But there is great diversity in the shape of the
+head, the angle of the jaw, the formation of the mouth
+and nose, the colour (when not tainted or "improved"
+by an admixture of European blood, whether Mexican
+or American or other) being pretty uniform, a rich
+bronze, with something of a copper hue, predominating
+in the young people. The boys were dressed in a plain
+neat uniform of greyish-blue, military tunics and
+trousers, well shod and comfortably equipped in all
+respects. The girls, amongst whom, perhaps, taste for
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_188" id="Page_188">188</a></span>
+eccentric finery was not unobservable, wore dresses less
+uniform in appearance, generally neat and always clean;
+but their foot gear was rather eccentric. The rooms,
+spacious barrack-like apartments, well ventilated, were
+appropriated to the classes according to age and progress,
+the boys being separated from the girls. The
+walls were hung with maps and furnished with educational
+coloured prints, and boards for arithmetical
+exercises were in each apartment. The desks and stools
+were such as would be seen in an ordinary school, and
+if one had not looked at the faces of the pupils and
+been struck by some of the strange characters on the
+walls he would have thought himself in the middle
+of some ordinary school; save, perhaps, that his ear
+would have missed the curious humming noise which
+marks the industry of idleness or of legitimate work
+in similar establishments in Europe. But here were
+all these young savages, poring over their books or
+boring with their pens, looking up at the visitors
+scarcely with curiosity and applying themselves again
+to their work, or answering questions put to them with
+the composure which must be a portion of the Red
+Man's nature.</p>
+
+<p>I cannot recollect how many tribes there were represented
+at the Carlisle school; but I was struck by
+the race-distinctions which could be observed when
+Captain Pratt, standing on a raised platform, called
+out the names of each tribe. The little batches, in
+some instances only one or two, stood up briskly and
+looked somewhat proudly about, as much as to say,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_189" id="Page_189">189</a></span>
+"We are Sioux (or Apaches, or Ponchas, or Creeks),
+not like these other fellows." And the young ladies
+were, if one might judge from their expression, quite
+as proud of their own people as the boys. But the
+names these poor children receive are ludicrous. Not
+content with calling them by English names, or
+American, singularly misapplied, very often, as a name
+may be, their own Indian nomenclature is translated
+into English, so that we heard reading and reciting
+beside "Luke Phillips" and "Almarine McKillip" (a
+Scotch Creek) "Maggie Stands-looking" and "Reuben
+Quick-bear." There was something of sarcasm, I think,
+in the address of a Creek boy to the visitors. He said:
+"The Indian boys had come here to learn something
+about the use of the bow and hunting. Their people
+believed that if boys grew up to manhood without
+learning they would be of no use; therefore they had
+sent the boys here to get education." Then, after
+some moral if trite reflections, the lad said: "You must
+understand that nearly everything that was made was
+made both for the present and the future. This barracks
+was not built for Indians, as I do not think the
+men who built it ever thought that it would be an
+Indian school; but things were made to do good both
+in the present and in the future." And then quoth
+he, looking at his white friends straight in the face:
+"The education which we are getting here is not like
+our own land, but it is something that cannot be
+stolen nor bought from us." And the white man did
+not turn red at the words! I do not pretend to judge
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_190" id="Page_190">190</a></span>
+of the actual progress made in learning, but the very
+intelligent self-possessed teachers reported uniformly
+that they were satisfied. The most useful education,
+perhaps, which these Indians receive is in practical
+mechanics, and a visit to the workshops attached to
+the barracks was amply repaid by the sight of these
+industrious young fellows hammering and leathering
+away in the various departments. They have actually
+completed waggons of a most satisfactory construction,
+complete in all their parts, so much so that orders
+have been received for as many as can be supplied for
+the use of Agencies. They make and repair their own
+shoes. They have sent out a hundred and twenty
+double sets of harness. They make coffee-boilers,
+cups, pans, pails, and all the articles known to the
+tin-smith; and the girls are taught to hem and sew
+and knit in the English fashion; but it must have
+been not many a long year before the white man
+landed, when the ancestors of these Indian maidens
+exercised the same mystery with fine sinew and skin
+in the wonderful work of which specimens are handed
+down to us to-day. On one point alone, perhaps,
+there was something to regret; the health of the
+children was not all that could be desired. Well
+clad, regularly fed, I presume on wholesome food,
+cleanly lodged in well-ventilated rooms, these wild
+children of the plains scarcely came up to the expectations
+one would form of them in the matter of chest-measurement;
+and although many were remarkable
+for fine physical development, Captain Pratt confessed
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_191" id="Page_191">191</a></span>
+that their sanitary condition was not everything that
+could be desired, and that losses from consumption and
+other causes were rather serious. But they have
+plenty of out-door exercise. They have games in
+which they rejoice. They drill and march to the
+sound of their own band, a very good brass band of
+eight performers, each of a different tribe, who played
+"Hail Columbia!" and the "Star-Spangled Banner,"
+and the like, with energy and zest; nay, with harmonious
+concurrence. When we went out into the
+large open square, there appeared before us a wonderful
+being in feathers, waving plumes, wampum and all
+the leathern panoply and peltry adornments of an
+Indian, painted, and armed with bow and arrow, probably
+such an one as Captain John Smith may have
+seen as he went exploring the woods of Virginia on
+his way to the sacrifice from which he was saved by
+Pocahontas. A target was erected at a distance of
+a hundred yards or so, and had I been in the centre of
+it, I should have been perfectly safe from the arrows
+which the Indian warrior discharged at it. But we
+were told that with a good bow a strong-armed Indian
+will drive an arrow right through a buffalo, and in
+that case I would suppose that the buffalo was very
+near to him indeed.</p>
+
+<p>Of course it is but natural to find very varying
+degrees of intelligence amongst the pupils, and the
+rate of progress was by no means uniform, but a
+committee of examination which recently visited the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_192" id="Page_192">192</a></span>
+school declared that the manifestations of advancement
+in the rudiments of English education were to
+them simply surprising. It was with admiration
+bordering on amazement they observed the facility and
+accuracy with which the children passed through the
+various exercises, in reading, geography, arithmetic,
+and writing, of the schoolroom; the accurate training
+and the amount of knowledge displayed were, they reported,
+the fullest proof not only of skilful teaching, but
+of great aptitude and diligence on the part of the children.
+Considering the brief period during which the
+school had been in operation, and the fact that the children
+entered it in a wholly untutored condition, the
+evidence was conclusive of the capability of culture.
+They go on to say: "We are fully persuaded that improvement
+equal to that which we have witnessed in
+the case of these children of the plains, if made in equal
+time by American children, would be regarded as quite
+unusual. And when the difficulty of communication
+consequent upon the diversities of language is taken
+into account we can but feel that the results of which
+we have been the witnesses to-day justify our judgment
+of them as amazing."</p>
+
+<p>One of the most interesting features connected with
+the attempts to educate the Indians at Carlisle is the
+'School News,' a little publication which, as I understand,
+is conducted by Indian pupils taught in the
+establishment, edited by Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee
+Indian boy. It is published once a month, and costs
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_193" id="Page_193">193</a></span>
+25 cents or 1<i>s.</i> per year. It takes as its motto the
+lines:</p>
+<div class="poetry-container">
+<div class="poem">
+<p class="o1">"A pebble cast into the sea is felt from shore to shore,</p>
+<p>A thought from the mind set free will echo on for ever more."</p>
+</div></div>
+
+<p>Perhaps neither the metre nor the actual statement
+commend themselves to acceptance, but the
+matter of the little journal is full of interest. In the
+first place the names of the contributors afford full
+matter for meditation. Perhaps it is one of the steps
+which must be taken to civilise these poor Indians that
+their names should undergo a strange and, to me,
+unmeaning metamorphose. There seems no reason
+whatever why the Indian names should not be retained,
+or if there is any reason for changing them, at
+least there might be some discrimination and good
+taste exercised in the adoption of English Christian
+names.</p>
+
+<p>The first number of the 'School News,' which I have
+before me, contains as an article: "What Michael
+Burns, an Apache boy, thinks on the Indian Question."
+He says, "I cannot help myself, having much feeling for
+my people, what has been said about them, and the
+efforts making to give us the same privileges as the
+people of the United States. And it is said how
+we have been treated by the bad white man, for the
+last ten or fifteen years, decreasing our number. But
+that kind for treatment for my nation will soon stop."
+The poor boy goes on to say: "There is no doubt
+that we are in fault. We had the opinion that we
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_194" id="Page_194">194</a></span>
+could not get beaten by any other nation. Now we
+know for ourselves that we will have to change....
+But how does the white man know which way
+is the best to do. Was he born that way? No!
+Education gives him the light of knowledge." Then
+a boy named Marcus Poko writes to his father: "I
+want you to try hard and leave the Comanche way,
+and to find the white man's way." In the leading
+article, written, I presume, by Samuel Townsend, it is
+said: "Indian ways will never be good any more, it
+is all passed, gone away, and the other way is coming
+up to take the place. We shall all be glad when we
+all get into the civilised way of living, then the
+Indians will not make so much trouble for the
+American people. Some people say 'let the Indians
+get out of the way. There is no use in trying to
+advance them, kill them all they are like the wild
+animals deaf and dumb, they never will learn anything.
+We have already paid so much money for
+them they have never become civilised yet.' But all
+good people say, 'Oh, yes, give them an education and
+plenty of opportunities, and send more teachers among
+them so they may come up beside us and live as
+brothers and live in peace.'" There is a little paragraph
+as to language. "There are a great many words in
+the English," says the writer, "that the Indians have
+no word for, so the white people who make the Indian
+books have to make new Indian words. So the Indians
+have to learn the new Indian words. Now we don't
+know much about it, but we believe the Indians can
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_195" id="Page_195">195</a></span>
+all learn to speak the same as the whites." Then
+there is a column about the school news: "Lizzie
+McRae, a Creek girl, made a very good corn bread the
+other day. We had some of it. It was right good I
+tell you." "Robert American Horse is a steady boy.
+He works in the blacksmith shop very well, and Mr.
+Harris never has to tell him but once how to do something."
+"One of the teachers had artificial violets on her
+belt. A Gros Ventre boy saw them, but did not know
+what they were, so he got up from his desk and went
+close to the teacher. He looked at it and then smelt
+it. When he smelt it he said, 'Pooh! rags!'" "Boys,
+some time ago Captain Pratt gave us advice about
+throwing stones at birds. Some of the boys who
+understand most English did not listen. We want
+the birds to come and stay with us and sing for
+us, too. Let us remember about this, and not let
+Captain Pratt have to say it again." "Last Sunday
+some of the large girls had a prayer-meeting in the
+yard at the back of the girls' quarters. Nobody told
+them to do it, but they thought it would be a good
+thing." There is a long letter from Lizzie Walton, a
+Pawnee girl of thirteen years old, describing a trip to
+Philadelphia, and I believe there are very few girls of
+thirteen years of age in any school who could write
+more amusingly or better. The account of a magic
+lantern by Ada Bent, a Cheyenne girl, closes the
+number.</p>
+
+<p>Letters from the children who are sent out to the
+farmers are published in this little periodical, and give
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_196" id="Page_196">196</a></span>
+a very pleasing picture of the lives and aptitudes of
+these Indians. Virginia, of Kiowar, writes from a farm,
+asking one of the teachers to pardon her for not having
+done so before; but "I have not much time," she says,
+"I am very busy set the table and wash dishes make
+my bed and make pies and cakes and try to make
+bread too, and the other things beside.... Sometime
+I make fire and bring in wood. Mrs. Borton is very
+kind lady she has two children one girl and boy. I
+love these little children very much." "My dear
+Miss H&mdash;&mdash;, I am not bad a girl. I help now a great
+deal. I pray for you almost every night, also when I
+wake up in the morning. I like to pray very much
+because I make myself good." And so on in a pleasant
+little gossiping way, frequently in very difficult language.
+There is an article in the 'School News' of
+July upon the shooting of President Garfield: "The
+man who shot him," says the writer, "we suppose,
+thought he would please some of the people in the
+United States. He thought he was very smart. If
+President were to die how would every white man,
+black man and the Indian feel? It was not in war
+when the President was shot, for our country don't
+have war any more, but in peace.... We all feel
+sorry because the President is suffering. We hope he
+will soon recover." It is stated that about a hundred
+boys and girls have gone out to work on the
+farms, and there are some trite remarks about the
+advantages of hard work as opposed to the disadvantages
+of laziness. "The farmers up country say
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_197" id="Page_197">197</a></span>
+the Indian boys can bind wheat first-rate." "Nelly
+Cook, Sioux, made 36 sheets in one day last week.
+Nellie Cary, Apache, made 32, and Ella Moore, Creek,
+made 30. Boys, do you think those girls are lazy?"
+The 'School News' has a reporter, it would appear,
+for the paper says that "Our reporter took a walk
+round in the shops to see what the boys were doing.
+In all the shops every boy was busy. In the carpenter
+shop there were Jock (Arapahoe), Ralph
+(Sioux), Elwood (Iowa), and Joe Gun (Ponca) sawing
+out window and door frames. Oscar (Cheyenne) and
+Michael Burns (Apache) were busy carving balcony
+posts; and Lester (Arapahoe) was outside chiselling
+a beam. These things are all for our new hospital....
+Jesse (Arapahoe) and Little Elk (Cheyenne) were busy
+in the gymnasium. The waggons which Robert
+American Horse has finished painting are to be sent
+to Oregon and Washington Territories." It is sometimes
+difficult to make out the meaning of the little
+prattle which these small people commit to the uncertain
+medium of the English tongue; but, on the
+whole, it is a most interesting and curious study. In
+one respect these children of the forest possess that
+which civilisation seems rather to dwarf amongst men of
+the highest culture and imagination&mdash;a certain stately
+eloquence and nobility of expression, in which natural
+images abound, and allegory and metaphor consort
+together in excellent and tasteful union. In a paper
+called 'Eadle Keatah Toh,' which seems to have been
+the precursor of the 'School News,' there is an interesting
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_198" id="Page_198">198</a></span>
+report from the Committee on Indian Affairs to
+the House of Representatives, submitted by Mr. Pound.
+The motto of the paper is "God helps those who help
+themselves"; but surely it might be better put that God
+will help those who seek to do good to the unfortunate
+Indians, who in contact with civilisation are rendered
+utterly helpless, and who in their attempts to help themselves
+according to the manner of the race must meet with
+nothing but extinction. From time to time there are
+notices of deaths. One would like to know who wrote
+the account of the "death of John Renville, son of
+Gabriel Renville, Chief of the Sisseton Sioux." After
+noticing the circumstances under which he contracted
+his fatal illness&mdash;fever, produced by drinking water
+at a spring on a hot day on a march to the camp in
+Perry County, the writer says:&mdash;"'Death loves a
+shining mark,' the poet sang long ago; and in the
+passing away of John Renville from our school we
+sadly say, how truthfully the poet sang....
+Through all the days of his sickness his large sorrowful
+eyes had a far-away wondering look, no pain
+marred the beauty of his brow, and his voice as he
+addressed his sister, who tenderly watched over him,
+was like the trumpet warbling of some mournful bird.
+Our hearts follow the father in deep sympathy as he
+bears back the body of his beautiful boy to the land
+of the Dakotas for burial."</p>
+
+<p>The Indian chiefs have a right, which they often
+exercise, of visiting these schools as a Board; and
+there is an account in the Carlisle paper of the visit
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_199" id="Page_199">199</a></span>
+of Spotted Tail, Iron Wing, White Thunder, Black
+Crow, and Louis Robideau from the Rosebud Agency;
+Red Cloud, American Horse, Red Dog, Red Shirt,
+Little Wound, and Two Strike from the Pine Ridge
+Agency; Like the Bear and Medicine Bull from
+the Lower Brule Agency; Son of the Star, Poor
+Wolf, Peter Beauchamp, and John Smith from
+Fort Berthold; Two Bears, John Big Head, Grass,
+Thunder Hawk, and Louis Primeau from Standing
+Rock; Charger and Bull Eagle from Cheyenne
+River; Brother to All and James Broadhead from
+Crow Creek; Strike the Ree and Jumping Thunder
+from Yankton; Robert Hakewashte and Eli Abraham
+from Santee Agency; Mr. Tackett and his wife
+and daughter; a daughter of Spotted Tail, and
+others. The meeting of the children with their
+parents is described as being most touching; and
+sometimes the pupils were not recognised, so greatly
+had they altered. As the chiefs seemed unwilling to
+speak when called upon to do so, there was silence for
+a time till a little girl, who had been about a year and
+a half at the school, expressed her desire to speak in so
+earnest a way that General Marshall permitted her to
+do so; and so, speaking in her own dialect, her words were
+translated into English and into Sioux. She declared
+that she liked the white man's ways and the white man's
+language. Indian words, she said, were down on the
+ground, but the white man's language was in his head.
+The chiefs, who listened attentively, seemed to understand
+this curious figure of speech, and nodded their
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_200" id="Page_200">200</a></span>
+approval. And then she enlarged upon the advantage
+of what she learned, and implored the chiefs to send
+their children to the school, where she says she is
+going to try to be God's daughter. Her words seemed
+to kindle the fire within the chieftains' breasts, for Like
+the Bear, a Sioux, and father of one of the boys at
+Hampton School, came forward and addressed the
+meeting. "There is no greater power in the world,"
+said he, "than the Great Spirit, and we must listen to
+Him and do what He wants us to do. When the men
+who were sent out by the Great Father the President
+asked for my children I gave them up. I see you are
+making brains for my children, and you are making
+eyes for them so that they can see. That is what I
+thank the Great Spirit for, and it is that which will
+make me strong." Then Robert Hakewashte, a chief
+from the Santee Agency, spoke, and said that he wanted
+schools like that which he saw here on his own reservation,
+and Spotted Tail wished for the same thing.
+"Since I have learned the words of God," he says, "it
+makes no difference to me what is the colour of a man's
+skin; if he walks like a man it is the same. I do not
+believe God likes the white colour only. God likes
+red and white, for He made them all." And then the
+flood of eloquence was loosened, and an old chief of the
+Sioux, nearly blind, verging on ninety years of age,
+who had come to see his grandson, said: "I grew up a
+red man, and the things I see here I never had a chance
+to see before. I have heard about the white man's
+church and his religion, and I have heard about the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_201" id="Page_201">201</a></span>
+holy house. I have looked into them, and I am very
+much pleased. But there is only one Great Spirit we
+all can worship, and the red men all over the country
+are hearing about it. You are teaching the children
+to worship the Great Spirit. That is a great thing,
+and I like it. But you have here two sons of one
+father. One is sick. I want you to keep the other."
+And so he carried him away.</p>
+
+<p>The condition of the Red Man who is allowed to exist
+under the banner of the Republic is a subject which
+has attracted the attention of the best and wisest men
+in the United States. The treatment of the Indians
+is a question of future policy. It is one which must
+exercise a very deep and abiding influence on the whole
+history of an ancient and interesting people. But it is
+exceedingly difficult to put in a short compass its most
+salient points before those who are unacquainted with
+the nature of the problems to be solved. Comparisons
+are odious, above all places, in America, when they
+are not to the advantage of the Great Republic, and
+I shall not draw any between the state of the Indian
+tribes in Canada and in the States. But it may be
+fairly admitted that the Indian Question in Canada
+is divested of many of the difficulties which surround
+it south of the lakes. The people of Canada have far
+more land than they know what to do with. They
+are a sparse population. They are not impelled
+to fierce adventures by mining "booms," and they
+are altogether less progressive than their American
+brethren. Shall we say that they are more charitable,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_202" id="Page_202">202</a></span>
+more humane, less greedy of other men's goods? I do
+not say so. But at all events it is perfectly true that
+the Red Man, although he is dying out under the
+influence of whiskey and other influences which need
+not be particularised, in his native land, lives in comparative
+peace and comfort under the British flag in
+Canada. He is content with the White Mother. He
+pursues the occupations dear to his race as a hunter
+and as a fisherman. He is a dealer in peltries, and in
+such small barter as his needs require. He is the
+companion of sportsmen, and he delights, free as mountain
+air, to hunt on the hillside and in the prairie in
+winter over the vast ranges of snowy fields which in
+the few short months of spring and summer teem with
+flowers, and the frosty lakes which yield fish to his spear
+and net. There are few or no railways through his
+reservations to vex his repose, no great trains of miners
+with pick and rifle to drive away the moose and the
+buffalo, and hand the native hunter over to starvation.
+The Indian gives to the white man all he needs, and
+aids him in obtaining from the wide stretch of land
+over which he roams all the wealth that it can afford.
+Practically one part of the Dominion is handed over
+to the Red Man and to the half-breeds, for there
+is an Indian frontier which as yet has not been much
+encroached upon by any large migration of whites.
+As far as I know, conflicts north of the Saint Lawrence
+between Indians and whites are unknown, or have not
+been heard of for very many years. South of the great
+lakes, in the wonderful land over which is displayed the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_203" id="Page_203">203</a></span>
+banner of the stars and stripes, the fate of the Indian
+is very different. In the words of Mr. Carl Schurz,
+himself an expert in the question, "the history of the
+relations of the United States with the Red Man
+presents in great part a record of broken treaties, of
+unjust wars and of cruel spoliation." That is a sweeping
+statement, which it would be just as well for an
+Englishman not to make, but coming from the mouth
+of an American citizen and of a United States Minister
+with plenty of evidence to back it, there can be no
+harm in recording my conviction of its truth. It is
+but another indictment against a defect in the form of
+government which Americans exalt as the most perfect
+of human institutions, that the central government
+made treaties in good faith with the Indian tribes, but
+was unable to enforce their obligations or to maintain
+their integrity. There is, as all well-informed people
+know&mdash;well informed, at least, in reference to American
+affairs&mdash;a commissioner who makes an annual report
+to the Secretary of the Interior respecting the Indian
+tribes in the various locations over the Union and
+the Territories. The last of these reports which I
+have seen is that of the Acting Commissioner Mr.
+Marble, addressed to the Department of the Interior
+from the office of Indian Affairs at Washington in the
+November of last year. The volume contains the
+reports of the agents in the Indian Territory; of the
+schools for Indian children established in pursuance of
+a wise and humane policy, and detailed statistics in
+relation to the Indian settlements and reservations, the
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_204" id="Page_204">204</a></span>
+latter indeed forming by far the largest portion of the
+volume of 400 pages. Before I call attention to the
+condition of the Indians, and the efforts made to save
+them from extinction or from a degradation worse than
+annihilation, I should like to direct the attention of
+those who are interested in the subject to the view
+which is beginning to find favour, I believe, among
+the most experienced men in the States, that the
+system of "Reservations" is founded on a mistake the
+magnitude of which is demonstrated every day, and that
+the only means of saving the Indians from extinction
+is their gradual absorption as educated communities in
+the agricultural life of the nation, keeping them far
+as may be from the white man, but making no other
+distinction between them and the other citizens of the
+United States than such as must be found in the nature
+of the Indian race and their degree of culture and civilisation&mdash;treating
+them, in fact, as communities of
+Mennonites, Mormons, or Norwegians, or other nationalities
+would be treated in the United States. When
+the Reservations were first established it was considered
+impossible that the migration of the whites
+would extend to the remote regions of the west to
+which the unfortunate survivors of the people with
+whose virtues and vices Cooper and other novelists
+have made us familiar were gradually and often remorselessly
+driven. It is a plea which will be urged in
+bar of judgment that the doctrine of States Rights
+prevented the interference of the United States Government
+on behalf of the Indian tribes who were often
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_205" id="Page_205">205</a></span>
+ruthlessly destroyed. But it will scarcely be a plea,
+I think, which humanity in full court would recognise
+as valid. <i>Homo homini lupus.</i> But to the Red Man
+as to the Black in many cases the White Man is worse
+than any wolf; far more bloodthirsty and rapacious
+than any tiger&mdash;a Cain of Cains. It was our own kith
+and kin who, landing on the shores of the North
+American continent, encroaching by degrees upon the
+tribes and at last encountering their hostility, spread
+their sway literally by fire and sword, and rooted out
+the Red Man wherever they found him established on
+land or by sea which they coveted. We, whose countrymen
+have worked out the same policy on the Australian
+continent and Van Diemen's Land, and who can only
+be restrained from its pursuit in New Zealand by the
+strong arm of the Home Government, can scarcely
+afford to take up stones to fling at our American
+brethren; and it is not with any purpose of indictment
+or accusation that I proceed to make a few remarks
+on the relations of the United States Government with
+the Red Man, and the efforts which they have been
+making to compensate the Indians in some measure
+for the injustice and persecution dealt out for many
+a generation.</p>
+
+<p>As I looked at the men gathered at some of the
+railroad stations in the western desert and thought
+of the Red Men whose fate it is to meet such representatives
+of civilisation and Christianity, I could not
+but be filled with pity for the unfortunates and with
+wonder at "the dispensation" under which they live.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_206" id="Page_206">206</a></span>
+The faces are fine and bold enough, bearded to the
+cheek or shaved in the American fashion, with bold
+staring eyes, which "look square" in your own, with
+a general expression "Do you want a fight?" in them&mdash;the
+heads to which they belong are generally set on
+muscular bodies. If a gang of these men think fit to
+go on to an Indian reservation&mdash;the very name is too
+often a bitter mockery&mdash;who is to stop them? If the
+Indians try to do so and one of the white intruders is
+killed the country-side rings with cries of "vengeance
+for the massacre of our brethren," and all the papers are
+filled with accounts of "Another Indian Outbreak."</p>
+
+<p>"The average frontier-man in the States looks," as
+Mr. Schurz says, "upon the Indian merely as a
+nuisance in his way. There are many whom it would
+be difficult to convince that it is a crime to kill an
+Indian." I will go further and say that there are
+many, I believe, who would take great pleasure in killing
+an Indian whenever they could; or as one gentleman
+observed to me, and I believe in his relations with
+white men no more just or honourable man or more
+humane could be found, "I would sooner kill an Indian
+than I would a skunk." When I was in the West,
+there was a cry raised that the Utes were about to
+wage war, and appeals appeared in the local papers
+for a military force to march against them. Their
+leaders were accused of arrogance and of insolence,
+and of murderous designs, and the general remark
+one heard was, "The Utes must go." I inquired a
+little into the matter when I got back, and I found
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_207" id="Page_207">207</a></span>
+that the Utes were strictly and absolutely, in their
+own right, standing upon the titles, which they had
+derived from the United States Government, to the
+lands from which they were required to move. These
+lands were wanted. Other lands were pointed out to
+them, to which they objected, and then they were
+informed that they would be moved by force, and preparations
+were made to levy war against these unfortunates,
+if they resisted deportation from the territory
+which had been assigned to them by the Great Father.
+Had they been Irish landlords, they could not have
+been treated worse; but in the West not one word
+was raised in favour of their claims.</p>
+
+<p>The first point which has to be considered is, that
+the Indian is obnoxious to the very class of men with
+whom he is by the necessity of things most closely
+brought in contact. The railway has been the great
+persecutor of Red Men. It has driven away the game,
+it has carried in proximity to their reservations all the
+enterprise charged with whiskey, revolver, rifle, and
+greed, which can be furnished by the offscourings of
+the world. In the Far West the miners in advance
+throng into the valleys, and break the silence of the
+mountain-ranges by the sound of their picks, the cattle-raisers
+spread out over the plains, the ploughman settles
+down on the fertile land. "What," asks the American
+philanthropist, and his question is echoed all over the
+world by humane and good men, "what is to become
+of the Indian?" The hunting-grounds are gradually
+being pushed farther west and north until they are
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_208" id="Page_208">208</a></span>
+bounded by the sea, and by the eternal snow. And if
+by any chance it should be found that there is gold or
+lead, silver or iron, or copper, or coal in any abundance,
+even under these unpromising conditions it will be
+sought. The buffalo is disappearing fast, faster than
+the Indian himself. Deer are becoming scarcer every
+year. What is to be left for the Red Man? Pastoral
+life and agriculture, say the philanthropists. The
+substitution, however, is not so easy. The weakness
+of the United States Government is the main cause
+why the policy of reservations has failed. Let us
+take the account of it by a United States Minister.
+"The Government," says Mr. Schurz, "has tried to
+protect the Indians in good faith against encroachments,
+and has failed. It has yielded to the pressure
+exercised upon it by people in immediate contact
+with the Indians. When a collision between Indians
+and whites once occurred, no matter who was responsible
+for it, our military forces were always found
+on the side of the white against the savage. How
+was Government to proclaim that white men should
+for ever be excluded from the millions of acres covered
+by Indian reservations, and that the national power
+would be exerted to do so?" Such an idea the American
+Minister thinks would be utterly preposterous. The
+rough and ready frontier-man would pick quarrels
+with the Indians; the speculators would urge him on.
+Government could not prevent collisions; the conflict
+once brought on, Government, in spite of its good
+intentions and sense of justice, would find itself employing
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_209" id="Page_209">209</a></span>
+its forces to hunt down the Indian. The old
+story would be repeated, as it will be wherever, says
+Mr. Schurz, there is a large and valuable Indian Reservation
+surrounded by white settlements, "and unjust,
+disgraceful as it is, that is an inevitable result."
+Such being the case then, the United States Government
+being powerless to see that right shall be done,
+and it being at once a human and a Christian duty to
+avert, if possible, the extinction of the original possessors
+of this grand continent, let us see what can be
+done to carry out the object. Fit the Indians, it is
+said, for the habits and occupations of civilised life;
+give them individual possession of land as property,
+a fee-simple title to the fields they cultivate, guarded
+by an absolute prohibition of sale&mdash;because it has been
+found that whenever the Indians are exposed to the
+temptation of artful traders, they will be cajoled out
+of the titles they have to their land&mdash;and you will save
+the remnants from utter destruction. I hope it will
+be so. I could not but feel a glow of enthusiasm when
+I heard the Attorney-General, Mr. MacVeagh, at
+Washington, speaking incidentally one day about some
+railway matter, declare that he would not sanction
+the making of a line of railway through Indian Territory
+until he was satisfied that the Indians actually
+understood the conditions which had been offered to
+them by the company. "I will," said Mr. MacVeagh,
+"send down government agents there to ascertain
+that the Indians thoroughly understand what they are
+doing, and that it is of their own free will and consent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_210" id="Page_210">210</a></span>
+that the railway passes through their territory in exchange
+for the money and goods they receive for the
+concession." Excellent and just minister! But, alas!
+I believe that ere I left the United States the whole
+thing was done; the railway company had declared
+that they would, whether or no, make their line, and
+if an Indian touched a hair of the head of any white
+man, the United States Government would not be able
+to avert the Divine wrath of every white man on the
+border from the whole of the tribe. Well may Mr.
+Schurz say that the thought of exterminating a race
+once the only occupants of the soil, where so many
+millions of our own people have flourished, must be
+revolting to every American who is not devoid of all
+sentiments of justice and humanity. Extermination
+or civilisation is the alternative offered to the Indian.
+Now let us see how it is proposed to civilise them.
+According to the returns in the Report for 1880, the
+number of Indians in the United States, exclusive of
+those in Alaska, is 256,127. Of these, 138,642 are
+described as wearing citizen's dress. It will be observed
+that there is no estimate given of the Indians who
+do not wear citizen's dress under this head. Citizens
+must be sometimes very badly dressed indeed if the
+Indians I saw at various stations along the line to San
+Francisco in shocking bad hats and tattered clothes were
+to be included amongst those who figured under this
+description in the report of the Commissioner. About
+17,000 houses are reported as occupied. There are
+224 schools, attended by 6000 scholars for a month
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_211" id="Page_211">211</a></span>
+or more during the year, scattered over the continent.
+About 34,550 Indians could read. There were 154
+church buildings and 74 missionaries. The number of
+children of school age was 34,541; but this was an
+under estimate. Of these there was only school accommodation
+for 9972. The total amount expended for
+education during the year by the United States Government
+was $249,299; by the State of New York,
+$15,863; by the State of Pennsylvania, $325; by
+other States, nothing; by religious societies, $46,933;
+by tribal funds, $7481. 22,048 Indian families were
+engaged in cultivating farms or small patches of
+ground; 33,125 male Indians were labouring in civilised
+pursuits; and 358 Indian apprentices had been
+pursuing trades during the year. This census and
+these statistics are stated to be imperfect, and it would
+require a close examination of the returns to enable an
+inquirer to form any idea as to the progress made in
+the direction which we are told is the alternative of
+destruction.</p>
+
+<p>The Reservations of the various Indian tribes are
+scattered irregularly over the United States; from
+Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota on the north and
+north-west, away to the Territories on the other side of
+the Rocky Mountains, down to New Mexico and Arizona,
+there being none in the southern states bordering the
+Atlantic. But there are Red Men of different tribes
+located, as the Americans would say, in the States to the
+east, such as New York. The Reservations are of irregular
+size and extent. Isabella, in the State of Maine,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_212" id="Page_212">212</a></span>
+reserved for 848 Indians, lies to the east of 86° longitude,
+and south of 44° latitude. There is a considerable
+group of Reservations on the western shore of
+Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, and in Minnesota. But
+the proper Indian territory lies west of Arkansas,
+with the Red River on the south, New Mexico on
+the west, and Kansas on the north; and in it are
+concentrated the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chicasaws,
+Comanches, Cheyennes, and several other tribes. The
+Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and Arizona ranks
+perhaps next in size, extending northwards into
+Colorado, where the Utes have got a large tract of
+land assigned to them upon what appears now to
+be very doubtful or vanishing tenure. These, and
+numerous reservations, which it would be tedious to
+enumerate, are under the charge of agents appointed
+by the Government at Washington, as to whose
+functions and personal character and attainments one
+hears very surprising and contradictory reports. But
+I confess, from a perusal of the documents which they
+have furnished to the head of the Department, and
+which are published in the Annual Report, there
+seems to me no just ground for imputing to these
+gentlemen want of zeal, knowledge, interest, or
+intelligence. Those who detest the whole work of
+saving the Red Man are very apt to impute to the
+Indian agents not only corrupt practices in relation to
+the sale of government stores and supplies destined
+for the use of those under their charge, but illicit
+traffic in spirits, which is ruinous to the Red Man,
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_213" id="Page_213">213</a></span>
+and even some participation in the acts of violence
+which have frequently led to Indian troubles. It all
+depends upon the manner in which your informant in
+the States regards the Indian Question whether the
+agents are described as scoundrels whom no man could
+trust, or as gentlemen of high propriety and general
+excellence.</p>
+
+<p>The necessities which have been imposed by advancing
+civilisation of providing Indians with food
+entail a heavy outlay upon the United States Government,
+which is much begrudged by large sections of
+members of Congress, although they do not see their way
+clearly to withhold supplies of food from the unfortunate
+people whose hunting-grounds have been occupied,
+and who have not yet learned the arts of agriculture,
+so as to be able to supply themselves with food. The
+transportation of stores, the cost of beef, corn, coffee,
+bread, tobacco, tea; in fact, all kinds of food, woollen
+goods, clothing, boots, hats, groceries, waggons, tools,
+hardware, and medical supplies,&mdash;all these duly figure
+in the estimates of the Indian Commissioner to a very
+considerable amount, and the returns as yet do not
+present any large reduction on the annual charge;
+although nearly all the agents speak in terms of great
+hopefulness of the extraordinary advance which has
+been made in their agencies in the cultivation of the
+soil.</p>
+
+<p>One remarkable division of the agencies has reference
+to their appropriation to religious denominations.
+An Indian might well be puzzled as to his
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_214" id="Page_214">214</a></span>
+form of belief if he were passed through the various
+agencies, attending at each a religious service or two,
+and listening to the teaching of the various divines
+attached to them. The Society of Friends have
+control of the belief and religious teaching of the
+Sante and Nemaja Indians in Nebraska, and of the
+Pawnees in the Indian Territory; to the Methodists
+are assigned three tribes in California, three tribes in
+Washington Territory, two in Oregon, three in Montana,
+two in Idaho, and one in Michigan. The Nevada
+Cherokees, Creeks, Choctaws, Chicasaws, and Seminoles
+are handed over to the Baptists. The Presbyterians
+have charge of the Nezpercès in Idaho, Umtas in
+Utah; the Apaches, Pueblos, and two other tribes
+in New Mexico. The Congregational Church exercises
+its religious offices among the tribes in Wisconsin,
+among two tribes in Dacotah, and one in Washington
+Territory. The Reformed Church has its work
+cut out for it in Arizona amongst four tribes. The
+Protestant Episcopal Church exercises its jurisdiction
+over one tribe in Minnesota, six tribes in Dacotah, one
+in Indian Territory, and one in Wyoming. The Unitarians
+have apparently only one tribe in teaching, the
+Los Pinos in Colorado. The United Presbyterians have
+one tribe in Oregon; the Christian Union has another
+in Oregon; the Evangelical Lutheran has charge of the
+Southern Utes in Colorado; and lastly, the Roman
+Catholic Church has two tribes in Washington Territory,
+two in Oregon, one in Montana, and two in Dacotah.
+As a general rule, the reports of the missionaries
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_215" id="Page_215">215</a></span>
+themselves are more sanguine, as they are wont to be,
+than are those of disinterested, perhaps unprejudiced,
+observers of their work. But, as is natural, the actual
+progress made depends very much, not only upon the
+nature of the tribe among whom the work is carried
+on, but on the character of the missionary, and on his
+ability and energy. In some instances, I see the condition
+of a tribe is reported as being lamentable,
+from a religious point of view, whilst in a neighbouring
+reservation, it is stated that great progress has
+been made in the establishment of religious teaching
+and ideas. The Rosebud Agency is said to prosper in
+the hands of one reverend gentlemen; the fathers of
+St. Ignatius are described as doing good work amongst
+the Flatheads; the Pawnees are left without any missionaries
+at all, and, says the government report, "are
+probably better off without them." And depreciatory
+remarks are slightingly introduced concerning the work
+at other agencies. On the Devil's Lake Agency, the majority
+of the adults shun the missionaries as they
+would the gentleman who may be supposed to own the
+lake by the sides of which they are encamped. The
+Jesuit fathers and the Catholic sisters are described
+as working generally with zeal and success, whilst one
+agency assigned to the Methodists is said to have
+no religious agency at all. It is to the success of
+the attempts made to educate the Indians at the
+public establishments that the philanthropist and
+humanitarian must look with the most hopefulness.</p>
+
+<p>All the reports of the teachers and visitors of these
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_216" id="Page_216">216</a></span>
+schools coincide in one point, that the young Indian
+is most teachable, and that in respect of acquiring
+knowledge he is, if anything, the superior of the white,
+who seems to enjoy no hereditary excellence in his
+capacity for acquiring knowledge. The Bill to which
+the Report was an introduction may be considered
+indeed as the Magna Charta of the Indian tribes if
+it be followed up by judicious treatment, and careful
+management of and consideration for the rights conferred
+upon these tribes as preliminary to their absorption
+as citizens in the mass of the nation, when
+they are fit for such an amalgamation with the white
+races. The advance of the United States westwards
+has left vacant many military posts and barracks,
+stranded, as it were, high and dry in the midst of
+the torrent of civilisation. Fort Bridger, Wyoming;
+Carlisle Barracks, Pennsylvania; Fort Craig, New
+Mexico; Fort Cummings, in the same territory, and
+a number of others, have been named as suitable for
+the purpose of educating the Indian children; and it
+was in pursuance of the measure recommended to Congress
+that the various agencies throughout the Indian
+Territories were directed to forward children whom
+their parents might wish to entrust to the officers of
+the United States for education. "Received in the
+rudest state of savagism," says the Report, "their progress
+is already most remarkable." I have already
+remarked that the health of the boys is not generally
+satisfactory. Their sanitary condition is bad; and it
+would appear that sometimes in these long and tedious
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_217" id="Page_217">217</a></span>
+journeyings from the remote Indian agencies the poor
+children suffer much.</p>
+
+<p>Even at the present moment the Anglo-Saxon
+appears to be dealing with the Maori in New Zealand
+very much as he has dealt with the native in Tasmania
+and in Australia. The history of our relations with
+the New Zealand chiefs and people is not in a nature
+to enable us to throw stones at the Americans with
+impunity, for the glass house in which we live can
+very easily be reached. Some sixteen or seventeen
+years ago a rebellion, arising out of the aggressions of
+the white settlers on the lands of the Maori, was
+averted by a Proclamation and by Acts confiscating
+a large tract of Tallinassey, which became theoretically
+the property of the Crown. Of course the
+natives had as little to say to that as the lady who is
+mentioned in 'Tristram Shandy' had with the declaration
+that "she was not related to her own child."
+But they did not recognise the occupancy, and whenever
+a white man settled upon a portion of the ground
+they pulled down his fences and removed his landmarks.
+The contest is still going on, but no one who
+is acquainted with the history of the colony will doubt
+what the end will be; and it is coming soon, or it is
+to come, the moment the colonists are bent upon
+taking the land, and when it is desired to do so.</p>
+
+<p>"It but feebly expresses the judgment formed from
+what we have observed to say that we regard the experiment
+made in this school to educate and improve
+Indian children as in every way a very remarkable
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_218" id="Page_218">218</a></span>
+success." <i>Si sic omnes!</i> Why does not the United
+States Government, or if not the Government, the
+people, abounding in wealth, full of pious impulses,
+humane, charitable, who justly say that the worst use
+you can make of an Indian is to hang him; why do
+not the political economists who declare that it costs a
+million of dollars to get rid of an Indian with gunpowder
+and lead; why do not the enterprising and
+wealthy capitalists who desire to appropriate Indian
+Reservations all combine to extend the work of these
+schools so as to absorb all that remains of the Red
+Man in the rising generation amongst the citizens of
+the great Republic? A blessed work, worthy of an
+imperial State, truly great and truly good!</p>
+
+<p class="center p4">THE END.</p>
+<hr class="l30 p4" />
+
+<p class="center s08">LONDON:<br />
+
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED.<br />
+
+STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.</p>
+
+<div class="footnotes">
+<h2 class="fntitle">FOOTNOTES</h2>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_A" id="Footnote_A" href="#FNanchor_A"><span class="label">[A]</span></a> How Mr. Garrett executed his mission and killed the Kid is
+narrated in the account of the desperados of the West, which forms a
+separate chapter.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_B" id="Footnote_B" href="#FNanchor_B"><span class="label">[B]</span></a>The day of our departure from the United States, after the visit
+of which I have been giving the details, was the date of a great crime,
+of which we were then ignorant. About the very time that we were
+on our way to the wharf to embark on board the "<i>City of Berlin</i>," the
+murderer of the President was accomplishing his purpose. But with
+all the means and appliances which exist for the despatch of news,
+I believe that the commission of the crime was not known till the
+steamer had passed out to sea from the Sand Heads.</p>
+
+<p class="footnote"><a name="Footnote_C" id="Footnote_C" href="#FNanchor_C"><span class="label">[C]</span></a> <i>See also</i> Rose Library.</p>
+</div>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C1" id="Page_C1">1</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center p6"><i>A Catalogue of American and Foreign Books Published or
+Imported by</i> <span class="smcap">Messrs. Sampson Low &amp; Co.</span> <i>can
+be had on application.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>Crown Buildings, 188, Fleet Street, London,<br />
+January, 1881.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center"><span class="b12">A Selection from the List of Books</span><br />
+
+PUBLISHED BY<br />
+
+<span class="b12">SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON.</span></p>
+
+<hr class="l05" />
+<p class="center">ALPHABETICAL LIST.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">
+<i>A Classified Educational Catalogue of Works</i> published
+in Great Britain. Demy 8vo, cloth extra. Second Edition,
+revised and corrected to Christmas, 1879, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>About Some Fellows.</i> By an <span class="smcap">Eton Boy</span>, Author of "A Day
+of my Life." Cloth limp, square 16mo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Adventures of Captain Mago.</i> A Ph&oelig;nician's Explorations
+1000 years <span class="smcap">B.C.</span> By <span class="smcap">Leon Cahun</span>. Numerous Illustrations. Crown
+8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Adventures of a Young Naturalist.</i> By <span class="smcap">Lucien Biart</span>, with
+117 beautiful Illustrations on Wood. Edited and adapted by <span class="smcap">Parker
+Gillmore</span>. Post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, New Edition, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Afghan Knife (The).</i> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">Robert Armitage
+Sterndale</span>, Author of "Seonee." Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>After Sundown; or, The Palette and the Pen.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. W. Fenn</span>,
+Author of "Blind-Man's Holiday," &amp;c. With Portrait of Author.
+2 vols., crown 8vo, cloth extra, 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Albania: A Narrative of Recent Travel.</i> By <span class="smcap">E. F. Knight</span>.
+With some very good Illustrations specially made for the work.
+Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Alcott (Louisa M.) Jimmy's Cruise in the "Pinafore."</i> With 9
+Illustrations. Second Edition. Small post 8vo, cloth gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Aunt Jo's Scrap-Bag.</i> Square 16mo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+(Rose Library, 1<i>s.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Men: Life at Plumfield with Jo's Boys.</i> Small
+post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Rose Library, Double vol. 2<i>s.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Women.</i> 1 vol., cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Rose
+Library, 2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.)
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C2" id="Page_C2">2</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Old-Fashioned Girl.</i> Best Edition, small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Rose Library, 2<i>s.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Work and Beginning Again.</i> A Story of Experience.
+1 vol., small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i> Several Illustrations. (Rose
+Library, 2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Shawl Straps.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Eight Cousins; or, the Aunt Hill.</i> Small post 8vo,
+with Illustrations, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Rose in Bloom.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra,
+3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Silver Pitchers.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Under the Lilacs.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Jack and Jill.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"Miss Alcott's stories are thoroughly healthy, full of racy fun and humour ...
+exceedingly entertaining.... We can recommend the 'Eight Cousins.'"&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Alpine Ascents and Adventures; or, Rock and Snow Sketches.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">H. Schütz Wilson</span>, of the Alpine Club. With Illustrations by
+<span class="smcap">Whymper</span> and <span class="smcap">Marcus Stone</span>. Crown 8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 2nd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Andersen (Hans Christian) Fairy Tales.</i> With Illustrations in
+Colours by E. V. B. Royal 4to, cloth, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Architecture (The Twenty Styles of).</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">W. Wood</span>, Author
+of "The Hundred Greatest Men." Imperial 8vo, with 52 Plates.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Art Education.</i> <i>See</i> "Illustrated Text Books."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Autobiography of Sir G. Gilbert Scott, R.A., F.S.A., &amp;c.</i>
+Edited by his Son, <span class="smcap">G. Gilbert Scott</span>. With an Introduction by the
+<span class="smcap">Dean of Chichester</span>, and a Funeral Sermon, preached in Westminster
+Abbey, by the <span class="smcap">Dean of Westminster</span>. Also, Portrait on
+steel from the portrait of the Author by <span class="smcap">G. Richmond</span>, R.A. 1 vol.,
+demy 8vo, cloth extra, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="l30" />
+<p class="center b12">THE BAYARD SERIES,</p>
+
+<p class="center">Edited by the late <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>.<br />
+
+Comprising Pleasure Books of Literature produced in the Choicest Style as
+Companionable Volumes at Home and Abroad.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"We can hardly imagine better books for boys to read or for men to ponder
+over."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review"><i>Price 2s. 6d. each Volume, complete in itself, flexible cloth extra, gilt edges,
+with silk Headbands and Registers.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Story of the Chevalier Bayard.
+By M. De Berville.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">De Joinville's St. Louis, King of
+France.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Essays of Abraham Cowley, including
+all his Prose Works.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Abdallah; or, The Four Leaves.
+By Edouard Laboullaye.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C3" id="Page_C3">3</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Table-Talk and Opinions of Napoleon
+Buonaparte.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Vathek: An Oriental Romance.
+By William Beckford.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The King and the Commons. A
+Selection of Cavalier and Puritan
+Songs. Edited by Professor
+Morley.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Words of Wellington: Maxims and
+Opinions of the Great Duke.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Dr. Johnson's Rasselas, Prince of
+Abyssinia. With Notes.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Hazlitt's Round Table. With Biographical
+Introduction.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">The Religio Medici, Hydriotaphia,
+and the Letter to a Friend. By
+Sir Thomas Browne, Knt.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Ballad Poetry of the Affections. By
+Robert Buchanan.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Coleridge's Christabel, and other
+Imaginative Poems. With Preface
+by Algernon C. Swinburne.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Lord Chesterfield's Letters, Sentences,
+and Maxims. With Introduction
+by the Editor, and
+Essay on Chesterfield by M. de
+Ste.-Beuve, of the French Academy.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Essays in Mosaic. By Thos. Ballantyne.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">My Uncle Toby; his Story and his
+Friends. Edited by P. Fitzgerald.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Reflections; or, Moral Sentences and
+Maxims of the Duke de la Rochefoucauld.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Socrates: Memoirs for English
+Readers from Xenophon's Memorabilia.
+By Edw. Levien.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">Prince Albert's Golden Precepts.</p>
+
+<p class="center s08"><i>A Case containing 12 Volumes, price 31s. 6d.; or the Case separately, price 3s. 6d.</i></p>
+
+<hr class="l30" />
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Beauty and the Beast.</i> An Old Tale retold, with Pictures by
+E. V. B. 4to, cloth extra. 10 Illustrations in Colours. 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Begum's Fortune (The): A New Story.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>.
+Translated by <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. Numerous Illustrations.
+Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Ben Hur: A Tale of the Christ.</i> By <span class="smcap">L. Wallace</span>. Crown
+8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Beumers' German Copybooks.</i> In six gradations at 4<i>d.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Biart (Lucien).</i> <i>See</i> "Adventures of a Young Naturalist,"
+"My Rambles in the New World," "The Two Friends," "Involuntary
+Voyage."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Bickersteth's Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer</i>
+may be had in various styles and bindings from 1<i>d.</i> to 21<i>s.</i> <i>Price
+List and Prospectus will be forwarded on application.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Bickersteth (Rev. E. H., M.A.) The Reef, and other Parables.</i>
+1 vol., square 8vo, with numerous very beautiful Engravings, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Clergyman in his Home</i>. Small post 8vo, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Master's Home-Call; or, Brief Memorials of</i>
+<i>Alice Frances Bickersteth</i>. 20th Thousand. 32mo, cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Master's Will</i>. A Funeral Sermon preached
+on the Death of Mrs. S. Gurney Buxton. Sewn, 6<i>d.</i>; cloth gilt, 1<i>s.</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C4" id="Page_C4">4</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Shadow of the Rock.</i> A
+Selection of Religious Poetry. 18mo, cloth extra, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Shadowed Home and the Light Beyond.</i> 7th
+Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Biographies of the Great Artists (Illustrated).</i> Each of the
+following Volumes is illustrated with from twelve to twenty full-page
+Engravings, printed in the best manner, and bound in ornamental
+cloth cover, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Library Edition, bound in a superior style,
+and handsomely ornamented, with gilt top; six Volumes, enclosed
+in a cloth case, with lid, £1 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each case.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Hogarth.</b></li>
+<li><b>Turner.</b></li>
+<li><b>Rubens.</b></li>
+<li><b>Holbein.</b></li>
+<li><b>Tintoretto.</b></li>
+<li><b>Little Masters of Germany.</b></li>
+<li><b>Fra Angelico and Masaccio.</b></li>
+<li><b>Fra Bartolommeo.</b></li>
+<li><b>Giotto.</b></li>
+<li><b>Raphael.</b></li>
+<li><b>Van Dyck and Hals.</b></li>
+<li><b>Titian.</b></li>
+<li><b>Rembrandt.</b></li>
+<li><b>Leonardo da Vinci.</b></li>
+<li><b>Gainsborough and Constable.</b></li>
+<li><b>Sir David Wilkie.</b></li>
+<li><b>Van Eyck.</b></li>
+<li><b>Figure Painters of Holland.</b></li>
+<li><b>Michel Angelo.</b></li>
+<li><b>Delaroche and Vernet.</b></li>
+<li><b>Landseer.</b></li>
+<li><b>Reynolds.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review">"Few things in the way of small books upon great subjects, avowedly cheap and
+necessarily brief, have been hitherto so well done as these biographies of the Great
+Masters in painting."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"A deserving series."&mdash;<i>Edinburgh Review.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"Most thoroughly and tastefully edited."&mdash;<i>Spectator.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Black (Wm.) Three Feathers.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart, and other Stories.</i> 1 vol.,
+small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Kilmeny: a Novel.</i> Small post 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>In Silk Attire.</i> 3rd Edition, small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Daughter of Heth.</i> 11th Edition, small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Sunrise.</i> 15 Monthly Parts, 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Blackmore (R. D.) Lorna Doone.</i> 10th Edition, cr. 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Alice Lorraine.</i> 1 vol., small post 8vo, 6th Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Clara Vaughan.</i> Revised Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Cradock Nowell.</i> New Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Cripps the Carrier.</i> 3rd Edition, small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Mary Anerley.</i> New Edition, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Erema; or, My Father's Sin.</i> With 12 Illustrations,
+small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Blossoms from the King's Garden: Sermons for Children.</i> By
+the Rev. <span class="smcap">C. Bosanquet.</span> 2nd Edition, small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Blue Banner (The); or, The Adventures of a Mussulman, a
+Christian, and a Pagan, in the time of the Crusades and Mongol
+Conquest.</i> Translated from the French of <span class="smcap">Leon Cahun</span>. With
+Seventy-six Wood Engravings. Imperial 16mo, cloth, gilt edges,
+7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C5" id="Page_C5">5</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Boy's Froissart (The).</i> 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> <i>See</i> "Froissart."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Boy's King Arthur (The).</i> With very fine Illustrations.
+Square crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Sidney
+Lanier</span>, Editor of "The Boy's Froissart."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Brazil: the Amazons, and the Coast.</i> By <span class="smcap">Herbert H. Smith</span>.
+With 115 Full-page and other Illustrations. Demy 8vo, 650 pp., 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Brazil and the Brazilians.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. C. Fletcher</span> and <span class="smcap">D. P.
+Kidder</span>. 9th Edition, Illustrated, 8vo, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Breton Folk: An Artistic Tour in Brittany.</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry
+Blackburn</span>, Author of "Artists and Arabs," "Normandy Picturesque,"
+&amp;c. With 171 Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Randolph Caldecott</span>.
+Imperial 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Bricks without Straw.</i> By the Author of "A Fool's Errand."
+Crown 8vo, with numerous Illustrations, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>British Goblins: Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends,
+and Traditions.</i> By <span class="smcap">Wirt Sykes</span>, United States Consul for Wales.
+With Illustrations by <span class="smcap">J. H. Thomas</span>. This account of the Fairy
+Mythology and Folk-Lore of his Principality is, by permission, dedicated
+to H.R.H. the Prince of Wales. Second Edition. 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Buckle (Henry Thomas) The Life and Writings of.</i> By <span class="smcap">Alfred
+Henry Huth</span>. With Portrait. 2 vols., demy 8vo.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Burnaby (Capt.)</i> <i>See</i> "On Horseback."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Burnham Beeches (Heath, F. G.).</i> With numerous Illustrations
+and a Map. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Butler (W. F.) The Great Lone Land; an Account of the Red
+River Expedition, 1869-70.</i> With Illustrations and Map. Fifth and
+Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Wild North Land; the Story of a Winter Journey
+with Dogs across Northern North America.</i> Demy 8vo, cloth, with
+numerous Woodcuts and a Map, 4th Edition, 18<i>s.</i> Cr. 8vo, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.</i> Demy 8vo, cloth,
+2nd Edition, 16<i>s.</i> Also, in crown 8vo, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Cadogan (Lady A.) Illustrated Games of Patience.</i>
+Twenty-four Diagrams in Colours, with Descriptive Text. Foolscap
+4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 3rd Edition, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Caldecott (R.).</i> <i>See</i> "Breton Folk."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Celebrated Travels and Travellers.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Verne</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Changed Cross (The)</i>, and other Religious Poems. 16mo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Child of the Cavern (The); or, Strange Doings Underground.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>. Translated by <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. Numerous
+Illustrations. Sq. cr. 8vo, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cl., plain edges, 5<i>s.</i>
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C6" id="Page_C6">6</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Child's Play</i>, with 16 Coloured Drawings by E. V. B. Printed
+on thick paper, with tints, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>New</i>. By E. V. B. Similar to the above. <i>See</i> New.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; A New and Cheap Edition of the two above, containing
+48 Illustrations by E. V. B., printed in tint, handsomely
+bound, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Children's Lives and How to Preserve Them; or, The Nursery
+Handbook.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Lomas, M.D.</span> Crown 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Choice Editions of Choice Books.</i> 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each, Illustrated by
+<span class="smcap">C. W. Cope</span>, R.A., <span class="smcap">T. Creswick</span>, R.A., <span class="smcap">E. Duncan</span>, <span class="smcap">Birket
+Foster</span>, <span class="smcap">J. C. Horsley</span>, A.R.A., <span class="smcap">G. Hicks</span>, <span class="smcap">R. Redgrave</span>, R.A.,
+<span class="smcap">C. Stonehouse</span>, <span class="smcap">F. Tayler</span>, <span class="smcap">G. Thomas</span>, <span class="smcap">H. J. Townshend</span>,
+<span class="smcap">E. H. Wehnert</span>, <span class="smcap">Harrison Weir</span>, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li>Bloomfield's Farmer's Boy.</li>
+<li>Campbell's Pleasures of Hope.</li>
+<li>Coleridge's Ancient Mariner.</li>
+<li>Goldsmith's Deserted Village.</li>
+<li>Goldsmith's Vicar of Wakefield.</li>
+<li>Gray's Elegy in a Churchyard.</li>
+<li>Keat's Eve of St. Agnes.</li>
+<li>Milton's L'Allegro.</li>
+<li>Poetry of Nature. Harrison Weir.</li>
+<li>Rogers' (Sam.) Pleasures of Memory.</li>
+<li>Shakespeare's Songs and Sonnets.</li>
+<li>Tennyson's May Queen.</li>
+<li>Elizabethan Poets.</li>
+<li>Wordsworth's Pastoral Poems.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review">"Such works are a glorious beatification for a poet."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Christ in Song.</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">Philip Schaff</span>. A New Edition,
+Revised, cloth, gilt edges, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cobbett</i> (<i>William</i>). A Biography. By <span class="smcap">Edward Smith</span>. 2
+vols., crown 8vo, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Confessions of a Frivolous Girl (The): A Novel of Fashionable
+Life.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Robert Grant</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cradle-Land of Arts and Creeds; or, Nothing New under the
+Sun.</i> By <span class="smcap">Charles J. Stone</span>, Barrister-at-law, and late Advocate,
+High Courts, Bombay. 8vo, pp. 420, cloth, 14<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cripps the Carrier.</i> 3rd Edition, 6<i>s.</i> See <span class="smcap">Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Cruise of H.M.S. "Challenger" (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">W. J. J. Spry</span>, R.N.
+With Route Map and many Illustrations. 6th Edition, demy 8vo, cloth,
+18<i>s.</i> Cheap Edition, crown 8vo, some of the Illustrations, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Curious Adventures of a Field Cricket.</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">Ernest
+Candèze</span>. Translated by <span class="smcap">N. D'Anvérs</span>. With numerous fine
+Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plain binding and edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Dana (R. H.) Two Years before the Mast and Twenty-Four
+years After.</i> Revised. Edition, with Notes, 12mo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Daughter (A) of Heth.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Day of My Life (A); or, Every Day Experiences at Eton.</i>
+By an <span class="smcap">Eton Boy</span>, Author of "About Some Fellows." 16mo, cloth
+extra, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> 6th Thousand.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C7" id="Page_C7">7</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Diane.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dick Cheveley: his Fortunes and Misfortunes.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. G.
+Kingston</span>. 350 pp., square 16mo, and 22 full-page Illustrations.
+Cloth, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dick Sands, the Boy Captain.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>. With
+nearly 100 Illustrations, cloth, gilt, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plain binding and plain
+edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dictionary (General) of Archæology and Antiquities.</i> From
+the French of <span class="smcap">E. Bosc</span>. Crown 8vo, with nearly 200 Illustrations,
+10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dodge (Mrs. M.) Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates.</i> An
+entirely New Edition, with 59 Full-page and other Woodcuts.
+Square crown 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i>; Text only, paper, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Dogs of Assize.</i> A Legal Sketch-Book in Black and White.
+Containing 6 Drawings by <span class="smcap">Walter J. Allen</span>. Folio, in wrapper, 6<i>s.</i> 8<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Eight Cousins</i>. <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Eighteenth Century Studies.</i> Essays by <span class="smcap">F. Hitchman</span>.
+Demy 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Elementary Education in Saxony.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. L. Bashford</span>, M.A.,
+Trin. Coll., Camb. For Masters and Mistresses of Elementary
+Schools. Sewn, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Elinor Dryden.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Embroidery (Handbook of).</i> By <span class="smcap">L. Higgin</span>. Edited by <span class="smcap">Lady
+Marian Alford</span>, and published by authority of the Royal School of
+Art Needlework. With 16 page Illustrations, Designs for Borders,
+&amp;c. Crown 8vo, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>English Philosophers.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Iwan Muller</span>, M.A., New
+College, Oxon. A Series of Volumes containing short biographies
+of the most celebrated English Philosophers, to each of whom is
+assigned a separate volume, giving as comprehensive and detailed a
+statement of his views and contributions to Philosophy as possible,
+explanatory rather than critical, opening with a brief biographical
+sketch, and concluding with a short general summary, and a bibliographical
+appendix. The Volumes will be issued at brief intervals, in
+square 16mo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>, containing about 200 pp. each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The following are in the press</i>:&mdash;-</p>
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Bacon.</b> Professor <span class="smcap">Fowler</span>, Professor of Logic in Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Berkeley.</b> Professor <span class="smcap">T. H. Green</span>, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
+Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Hamilton.</b> Professor <span class="smcap">Monk</span>, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Dublin.
+[<i>Ready.</i></li>
+
+<li><b>J. S. Mill.</b> <span class="smcap">Helen Taylor</span>, Editor of "The Works of Buckle," &amp;c.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C8" id="Page_C8">8</a></span></li>
+
+<li><b>Mansel.</b> Rev. <span class="smcap">J. H. Huckin, D.D.</span>, Head Master of Repton.</li>
+
+<li><b>Adam Smith.</b> <span class="smcap">J. A. Farrer, M.A.</span>, Author of "Primitive Manners and Customs."
+[<i>Ready.</i></li>
+
+<li><b>Hobbes.</b> <span class="smcap">A. H. Gosset, B.A.</span>, Fellow of New College, Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Bentham.</b> <span class="smcap">G. E. Buckle, M.A.</span>, Fellow of All Souls', Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Austin.</b> <span class="smcap">Harry Johnson, B.A.</span>, late Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford.</li>
+
+<li><b>Hartley.</b> } <span class="smcap">E. S. Bowen, B.A.</span>, late Scholar of New College,</li>
+
+<li><b>James Mill.</b> } Oxford.
+[<i>Ready.</i></li>
+
+<li><b>Shaftesbury.</b> } Professor <span class="smcap">Fowler</span>.</li>
+
+<li><b>Hutcheson.</b> }</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review"><i>Arrangements are in progress for volumes on</i> <span class="smcap">Locke</span>, <span class="smcap">Hume</span>, <span class="smcap">Paley</span>, <span class="smcap">Reid</span>, <i>&amp;c.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Episodes of French History.</i> Edited, with Notes, Genealogical,
+Historical, and other Tables, by <span class="smcap">Gustave Masson, B.A.</span></p>
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>1. Charlemagne and the Carlovingians.</b></li>
+
+<li><b>2. Louis XI. and the Crusades.</b></li>
+
+<li><b>3. Francis I. and Charles V.</b></li>
+
+<li><b>4. Francis I. and the Renaissance.</b></li>
+</ul>
+<p class="review">The above Series is based upon M. Guizot's "History of France."
+Each volume is choicely Illustrated, with Maps, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Erema; or, My Father's Sin.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Etcher (The).</i> Containing 36 Examples of the Original
+Etched work of Celebrated Artists, amongst others: <span class="smcap">Birket Foster</span>,
+<span class="smcap">J. E. Hodgson, R.A.</span>, <span class="smcap">Colin Hunter</span>, <span class="smcap">J. P. Heseltine</span>, <span class="smcap">Robert
+W. Macbeth</span>, <span class="smcap">R. S. Chattock</span>, <span class="smcap">H. R. Robertson</span>, &amp;c., &amp;c.
+Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2<i>l.</i> 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Eton.</i> <i>See</i> "Day of my Life," "Out of School," "About Some
+Fellows."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Evans (C.) Over the Hills and Far Away.</i> By <span class="smcap">C. Evans</span>.
+One Volume, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Strange Friendship.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Eve of Saint Agnes (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">John Keats</span>. Illustrated with
+Nineteen Etchings by <span class="smcap">Charles O. Murray</span>. Folio, cloth extra, 21<i>s.</i>
+An Edition de Luxe on large paper, containing proof impressions, has
+been printed, and specially bound, 3<i>l.</i> 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Farm Ballads.</i> By <span class="smcap">Will Carleton</span>. Boards, 1<i>s.</i>; cloth,
+gilt edges, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Fern Paradise (The): A Plea for the Culture of Ferns.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. New Edition, entirely Rewritten, Illustrated with
+Eighteen full-page, numerous other Woodcuts, including 8 Plates of
+Ferns and Four Photographs, large post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+Sixth Edition. In 12 Parts, sewn, 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C9" id="Page_C9">9</a></span>
+<i>Fern World (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Illustrated by Twelve
+Coloured Plates, giving complete Figures (Sixty-four in all) of every
+Species of British Fern, printed from Nature; by several full-page
+Engravings. Cloth, gilt, 6th Edition, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"Mr. <span class="smcap">Heath</span> has really given us good, well-written descriptions of our native
+Ferns, with indications of their habitats, the conditions under which they grow
+naturally, and under which they may be cultivated."&mdash;<i>Athenæum.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Few (A) Hints on Proving Wills.</i> Enlarged Edition, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>First Steps in Conversational French Grammar.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. Julien</span>.
+Being an Introduction to "Petites Leçons de Conversation et de
+Grammaire," by the same Author. Fcap. 8vo, 128 pp., 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Flooding of the Sahara (The).</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Mackenzie</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Food for the People; or, Lentils and other Vegetable Cookery.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">E. E. Orlebar</span>. Third Thousand. Small post 8vo, boards, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Fool's Errand (A).</i> By <span class="smcap">One of the Fools</span>. Author of "Bricks
+without Straw." Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with numerous Illustrations,
+8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Footsteps of the Master.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Stowe</span> (Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher</span>).</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Forbidden Land (A): Voyages to the Corea.</i> By <span class="smcap">G. Oppert</span>.
+Numerous Illustrations and Maps. Demy 8vo, cloth extra, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Four Lectures on Electric Induction.</i> Delivered at the Royal
+Institution, 1878-9. By <span class="smcap">J. E. H. Gordon</span>, B.A. Cantab. With
+numerous Illustrations. Cloth limp, square 16mo, 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Foreign Countries and the British Colonies.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">F. S.
+Pulling</span>, M.A., Lecturer at Queen's College, Oxford, and formerly
+Professor at the Yorkshire College, Leeds. A Series of small Volumes
+descriptive of the principal Countries of the World by well-known
+Authors, each Country being treated of by a Writer who from
+Personal Knowledge is qualified to speak with authority on the Subject.
+The Volumes average 180 crown 8vo pages each, contain 2 Maps
+and Illustrations, crown 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center s08"><i>The following is a List of the Volumes</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Denmark and Iceland.</b> By <span class="smcap">E. C. Otte</span>, Author of "Scandinavian
+History," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Greece.</b> By <span class="smcap">L. Sergeant</span>, B.A., Knight of the Hellenic Order
+of the Saviour, Author of "New Greece."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Switzerland.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. A. P. Coolidge</span>, M.A., Fellow of
+Magdalen College, Editor of <i>The Alpine Journal</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Austria.</b> By <span class="smcap">D. Kay</span>, F.R.G.S.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Russia.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. R. Morfill</span>, M.A., Oriel College, Oxford,
+Lecturer on the Ilchester Foundation, &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Persia.</b> By Major-Gen. Sir <span class="smcap">F. J. Goldsmid</span>, K.C.S.I., Author of
+"Telegraph and Travel," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Japan.</b> By <span class="smcap">S. Mossman</span>, Author of "New Japan," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Peru.</b> By <span class="smcap">Clements H. Markham</span>, M.A., C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Canada.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Fraser Rae</span>, Author of "Westward by
+Rail," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C10" id="Page_C10">10</a></span>
+<b>Sweden and Norway.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">F. H. Woods</span>, M.A., Fellow
+of St. John's College, Oxford.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The West Indies.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. H. Eden</span>, F.R.G.S., Author of "Frozen
+Asia," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>New Zealand.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>France.</b> By Miss <span class="smcap">M. Roberts</span>, Author of "The Atelier du Lys,"
+"Mdlle. Mori," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Egypt.</b> By <span class="smcap">S. Lane Poole</span>, B.A., Author of "The Life of Edward
+Lane," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Spain.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Wentworth Webster</span>, M.A., Chaplain at
+St. Jean de Luz.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Turkey-in-Asia.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. C. McCoan</span>, M.P.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Australia.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. F. Vesey Fitzgerald</span>, late Premier of New
+South Wales.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Holland.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. L. Poole</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Franc (Maude Jeane).</i> The following form one Series, small
+post 8vo, in uniform cloth bindings, with gilt edges:&mdash;</p>
+
+<ul class="none">
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Emily's Choice.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Hall's Vineyard.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>John's Wife: a Story of Life in South Australia.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Marian; or, the Light of Some One's Home.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Silken Cords and Iron Fetters.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Vermont Vale.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Minnie's Mission.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Mercy.</i> 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li>&mdash;&mdash; <i>Beatrice Melton's Discipline.</i> 4<i>s.</i></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Froissart (The Boy's).</i> Selected from the Chronicles of England,
+France, Spain, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">Sidney Lanier</span>. The Volume is
+fully Illustrated, and uniform with "The Boy's King Arthur." Crown
+8vo, cloth, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Games of patience.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Cadogan</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Gentle Life</i> (Queen Edition). 2 vols, in 1, small 4to, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+<hr class="l15" />
+<p class="center b12">THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES.</p>
+
+<p class="center">Price 6<i>s.</i> each; or in calf extra, price 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; Smaller Edition, cloth
+extra, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">A Reprint (with the exception of "Familiar Words" and "Other
+People's Windows") has been issued in very neat limp cloth bindings
+at 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Gentle Life.</i> Essays in aid of the Formation of Character
+of Gentlemen and Gentlewomen. 21st Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"Deserves to be printed in letters of gold, and circulated in every house."&mdash;<i>Chambers'
+Journal.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C11" id="Page_C11">11</a></span>
+<i>About in the World.</i> Essays by Author of "The Gentle Life."</p>
+
+<p class="review">"It is not easy to open it at any page without finding some handy idea."&mdash;<i>Morning
+Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Like unto Christ.</i> A New Translation of Thomas à Kempis'
+"De Imitatione Christi." 2nd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"Could not be presented in a more exquisite form, for a more sightly volume was
+never seen."&mdash;<i>Illustrated London News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Familiar Words.</i> An Index Verborum, or Quotation Handbook.
+Affording an immediate Reference to Phrases and Sentences
+that have become embedded in the English language. 4th and
+enlarged Edition. 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"The most extensive dictionary of quotation we have met with."&mdash;<i>Notes and
+Queries.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Essays by Montaigne.</i> Edited and Annotated by the Author
+of "The Gentle Life." With Portrait. 2nd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"We should be glad if any words of ours could help to bespeak a large circulation
+for this handsome attractive book."&mdash;<i>Illustrated Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia.</i> Written by Sir <span class="smcap">Philip
+Sidney</span>. Edited with Notes by Author of "The Gentle Life." 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"All the best things are retained intact in Mr. Friswell's edition."&mdash;<i>Examiner.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Gentle Life.</i> 2nd Series, 8th Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"There is not a single thought in the volume that does not contribute in some
+measure to the formation of a true gentleman."&mdash;<i>Daily News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected.</i> By the
+Author of "The Gentle Life." 3rd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"All who possess 'The Gentle Life' should own this volume."&mdash;<i>Standard.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Half-Length Portraits.</i> Short Studies of Notable Persons.
+By <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Essays on English Writers</i>, for the Self-improvement of
+Students in English Literature.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"To all who have neglected to read and study their native literature we would
+certainly suggest the volume before us as a fitting introduction."&mdash;<i>Examiner.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Other People's Windows.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>. 3rd Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"The chapters are so lively in themselves, so mingled with shrewd views of
+human nature, so full of illustrative anecdotes, that the reader cannot fail to be
+amused."&mdash;<i>Morning Post.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>A Man's Thoughts.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Hain Friswell</span>.</p>
+<hr class="l15" />
+<p class="hanging"><i>German Primer.</i> Being an Introduction to First Steps in
+German. By <span class="smcap">M. T. Preu</span>. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Getting On in the World; or, Hints on Success in Life.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">W. Mathews</span>, LL.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Gilpin's Forest Scenery.</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Large
+post 8vo, with numerous Illustrations. Uniform with "The Fern
+World," 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> In 6 monthly parts, 2<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C12" id="Page_C12">12</a></span>
+<i>Gordon (J. E. H.).</i> <i>See</i> "Four Lectures on Electric Induction,"
+"Physical Treatise on Electricity," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Gouffé. The Royal Cookery Book.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Gouffé</span>; translated
+and adapted for English use by <span class="smcap">Alphonse Gouffé</span>, Head
+Pastrycook to her Majesty the Queen. Illustrated with large plates
+printed in colours. 161 Woodcuts, 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2<i>l.</i> 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; Domestic Edition, half-bound, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"By far the ablest and most complete work on cookery that has ever been submitted
+to the gastronomical world."&mdash;<i>Pall Mall Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Great Artists.</i> <i>See</i> "Biographies."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Great Historic Galleries of England (The).</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Lord
+Ronald Gower</span>, F.S.A., Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery.
+Illustrated by 24 large and carefully-executed <i>permanent</i> Photographs
+of some of the most celebrated Pictures by the Great Masters. Imperial
+4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Great Musicians (The).</i> A Series of Biographies of the Great
+Musicians. Edited by <span class="smcap">F. Hueffer</span>.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>1. Wagner.</b> By the <span class="smcap">Editor</span>.</li>
+<li><b>2. Weber.</b> By Sir <span class="smcap">Julius Benedict</span>.</li>
+<li><b>3. Mendelssohn.</b> By <span class="smcap">Joseph Bennett</span>.</li>
+<li><b>4. Schubert.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. F. Frost</span>.</li>
+<li><b>5. Rossini</b>, and the Modern Italian School. By <span class="smcap">H. Sutherland Edwards</span>.</li>
+<li><b>6. Marcello.</b> By <span class="smcap">Arrigo Boito</span>.</li>
+<li><b>7. Purcell.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. W. Cummings</span>.</li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="review">Dr. Hiller and other distinguished writers, both English and
+Foreign, have promised contributions. Each Volume is complete in
+itself. Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Guizot's History of France.</i> Translated by <span class="smcap">Robert Black</span>.
+Super-royal 8vo, very numerous Full-page and other Illustrations. In
+8 vols., cloth extra, gilt, each 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"It supplies a want which has long been felt, and ought to be in the hands of all
+students of history."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; &mdash;&mdash; <i>Masson's School Edition.</i> The
+History of France from the Earliest Times to the Outbreak of the
+Revolution; abridged from the Translation by Robert Black, M.A.,
+with Chronological Index, Historical and Genealogical Tables, &amp;c.
+By Professor <span class="smcap">Gustave Masson</span>, B.A., Assistant Master at Harrow
+School. With 24 full-page Portraits, and many other Illustrations.
+1 vol., demy 8vo, 600 pp., cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Guizot's History of England.</i> In 3 vols. of about 500 pp. each,
+containing 60 to 70 Full-page and other Illustrations, cloth extra, gilt,
+24<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"For luxury of typography, plainness of print, and beauty of illustration, these
+volumes, of which but one has as yet appeared in English, will hold their own
+against any production of an age so luxurious as our own in everything, typography
+not excepted."&mdash;<i>Times.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Guyon (Mde.) Life.</i> By <span class="smcap">Upham</span>. 6th Edition, crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C13" id="Page_C13">13</a></span>
+<i>Handbook to the Charities of London.</i> <i>See</i> Low's.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>of Embroidery</i>; <i>which see</i>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>to the Principal Schools of England.</i> <i>See</i> Practical.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Half-Hours of Blind Man's Holiday; or, Summer and Winter
+Sketches in Black and White.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. W. Fenn</span>, Author of "After
+Sundown," &amp;c. 2 vols., cr. 8vo, 24<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hall (W. W.) How to Live Long; or, 1408 Health Maxims,
+Physical, Mental, and Moral.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. W. Hall</span>, A.M., M.D.
+Small post 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Dodge</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Harper's Monthly Magazine.</i> Published Monthly. 160 pages,
+fully Illustrated. 1<i>s.</i> With two Serial Novels by celebrated Authors.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"'Harper's Magazine' is so thickly sown with excellent illustrations that to count
+them would be a work of time; not that it is a picture magazine, for the engravings
+illustrate the text after the manner seen in some of our choicest <i>editions de luxe</i>."&mdash;<i>St.
+James's Gazette.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"It is so pretty, so big, and so cheap.... An extraordinary shillingsworth&mdash;160
+large octavo pages, with over a score of articles, and more than three times as
+many illustrations."&mdash;<i>Edinburgh Daily Review.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"An amazing shillingsworth ... combining choice literature of both nations."&mdash;<i>Nonconformist.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heart of Africa.</i> Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the
+Unexplored Regions of Central Africa, from 1868 to 1871. By Dr.
+<span class="smcap">Georg Schweinfurth</span>. Numerous Illustrations, and large Map.
+2 vols., crown 8vo, cloth, 15<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heath (Francis George).</i> <i>See</i> "Fern World," "Fern Paradise,"
+"Our Woodland Trees," "Trees and Ferns," "Gilpin's Forest
+Scenery," "Burnham Beeches," "Sylvan Spring," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heber's (Bishop) Illustrated Edition of Hymns.</i> With upwards
+of 100 beautiful Engravings. Small 4to, handsomely bound, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+Morocco, 18<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 21<i>s.</i> An entirely New Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Heir of Kilfinnan (The).</i> New Story by <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>,
+Author of "Snow Shoes and Canoes," &amp;c. With Illustrations. Cloth,
+gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>History and Handbook of Photography.</i> Translated from the
+French of <span class="smcap">Gaston Tissandier</span>. Edited by <span class="smcap">J. Thomson</span>. Imperial
+16mo, over 300 pages, 70 Woodcuts, and Specimens of Prints by the
+best Permanent Processes. Second Edition, with an Appendix by
+the late Mr. <span class="smcap">Henry Fox Talbot</span>. Cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>History of a Crime (The); Deposition of an Eye-witness.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Victor Hugo</span>. 4 vols., crown 8vo, 42<i>s.</i> Cheap Edition, 1 vol., 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Ancient Art.</i> Translated from the German of <span class="smcap">John
+Winckelmann</span>, by <span class="smcap">John Lodge</span>, M.D. With very numerous
+Plates and Illustrations. 2 vols., 8vo, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>England.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Guizot</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>France.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Guizot</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C14" id="Page_C14">14</a></span>
+&mdash;&mdash; <i>Russia.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Rambaud</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Merchant Shipping.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Lindsay</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>United States.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Bryant</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power.</i> With
+several hundred Illustrations. By <span class="smcap">Alfred Barlow</span>. Royal 8vo,
+cloth extra, 1<i>l.</i> 5<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>How I Crossed Africa: from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean,
+Through Unknown Countries; Discovery of the Great Zambesi
+Affluents, &amp;c.</i>&mdash;Vol. I., The King's Rifle. Vol. II., The Coillard
+Family. By Major <span class="smcap">Serpa Pinto</span>. With 24 full-page and 118 half-page
+and smaller Illustrations, 13 small Maps, and 1 large one.
+2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>How to Live Long.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Hall</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>How to get Strong and how to Stay so.</i> By <span class="smcap">William Blaikie</span>.
+A Manual of Rational, Physical, Gymnastic, and other Exercises.
+With Illustrations, small post 8vo, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hugo (Victor). "Ninety-Three."</i> Illustrated. Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Toilers of the Sea.</i> Crown 8vo. Illustrated, 6<i>s.</i>; fancy
+boards, 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; On large paper with all the original
+Illustrations, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>See</i> "History of a Crime."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hundred Greatest Men (The).</i> 8 portfolios, 21<i>s.</i> each, or 4
+vols., half morocco, gilt edges, 12 guineas, containing 15 to 20
+Portraits each. See below.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"Messrs. <span class="smcap">Sampson Low &amp; Co.</span> are about to issue an important 'International'
+work, entitled, 'THE HUNDRED GREATEST MEN;' being the Lives and
+Portraits of the 100 Greatest Men of History, divided into Eight Classes, each Class
+to form a Monthly Quarto Volume. The Introductions to the volumes are to be
+written by recognized authorities on the different subjects, the English contributors
+being <span class="smcap">Dean Stanley</span>, Mr. <span class="smcap">Matthew Arnold</span>, Mr. <span class="smcap">Froude</span>, and Professor <span class="smcap">Max
+Müller</span>; in Germany, Professor <span class="smcap">Helmholtz</span>; in France, MM. <span class="smcap">Taine</span> and
+<span class="smcap">Renan</span>; and in America, Mr. <span class="smcap">Emerson</span>. The Portraits are to be Reproductions
+from fine and rare Steel Engravings."&mdash;<i>Academy.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hygiene and Public Health (A Treatise on).</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">A. H.
+Buck</span>, M.D. Illustrated by numerous Wood Engravings. In 2
+royal 8vo vols., cloth, one guinea each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Hymnal Companion to Book of Common Prayer.</i> <i>See</i>
+<span class="smcap">Bickersteth</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Illustrated Text-Books of Art-Education.</i> Edited by
+<span class="smcap">Edward J. Poynter</span>, R.A. Each Volume contains numerous Illustrations,
+and is strongly bound for the use of Students, price 5<i>s.</i> The
+Volumes now ready are:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="center">PAINTING.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Classic and Italian.</b> By <span class="smcap">Percy R. Head</span>. With 50 Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></li>
+<li><b>German, Flemish, and Dutch.</b></li>
+<li><b>French and Spanish.</b></li>
+<li><b>English and American.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="center">ARCHITECTURE.
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C15" id="Page_C15">15</a></span></p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Classic and Early Christian.</b></li>
+<li><b>Gothic and Renaissance.</b> By <span class="smcap">T. Roger Smith</span>. With 50 Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="center">SCULPTURE.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Antique: Egyptian and Greek.</b></li>
+<li><b>Renaissance and Modern.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="center">ORNAMENT.</p>
+
+<ul class="author_list">
+<li><b>Decoration in Colour.</b></li>
+<li><b>Architectural Ornament.</b></li>
+</ul>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Illustrations of China and its People.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. Thompson</span>,
+F.R.G.S. Four Volumes, imperial 4to, each 3<i>l.</i> 3<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>In my Indian Garden.</i> By <span class="smcap">Phil Robinson</span>, Author of "Under
+the Punkah." With a Preface by <span class="smcap">Edwin Arnold</span>, M.A., C.S.I., &amp;c.
+Crown 8vo, limp cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Involuntary Voyage (An).</i> Showing how a Frenchman who
+abhorred the Sea was most unwillingly and by a series of accidents
+driven round the World. Numerous Illustrations. Square crown
+8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Irish Bar.</i> Comprising Anecdotes, Bon-Mots, and Biographical
+Sketches of the Bench and Bar of Ireland. By <span class="smcap">J. Roderick
+O'Flanagan</span>, Barrister-at-Law. Crown 8vo, 12<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Irish Land Question, and English Public Opinion (The).</i> With
+a Supplement on Griffith's Valuation. By <span class="smcap">R. Barry O'Brien</span>,
+Author of "The Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question."
+Fcap. 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Irving (Washington).</i> Complete Library Edition of his Works
+in 27 Vols., Copyright, Unabridged, and with the Author's Latest
+Revisions, called the "Geoffrey Crayon" Edition, handsomely printed
+in large square 8vo, on superfine laid paper, and each volume, of
+about 500 pages, will be fully Illustrated. 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per vol. <i>See also</i>
+"Little Britain."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Jack and Jill.</i> By Miss <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>. Small post 8vo, cloth,
+gilt edges, 5<i>s.</i> With numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>John Holdsworth, Chief Mate.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clarke Russell</span>,
+Author of "Wreck of the Grosvenor." Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Kingston (W. H. G.).</i> <i>See</i> "Snow-Shoes," "Child of
+the Cavern," "Two Supercargoes," "With Axe and Rifle,"
+"Begum's Fortune," "Heir of Kilfinnan," "Dick Cheveley." Each
+vol., with very numerous Illustrations, square crown 16mo, gilt edges,
+7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C16" id="Page_C16">16</a></span>
+<i>Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.</i> 6<i>s.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Lenten Meditations.</i> In Two Series, each complete in itself.
+By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Claude Bosanquet</span>, Author of "Blossoms from the
+King's Garden." 16mo, cloth, First Series, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; Second Series, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Library of Religious Poetry.</i> A Collection of the Best Poems
+of all Ages and Tongues. With Biographical and Literary Notes.
+Edited by <span class="smcap">Philip Schaff</span>, D.D., LL.D., and <span class="smcap">Arthur Gilman</span>,
+M.A. Royal 8vo, pp. 1036, cloth extra, gilt edges, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Life and Letters of the Honourable Charles Sumner (The).</i>
+2 vols., royal 8vo, cloth. Second Edition, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Lindsay (W. S.) History of Merchant Shipping and Ancient
+Commerce.</i> Over 150 Illustrations, Maps, and Charts. In 4 vols.,
+demy 8vo, cloth extra. Vols. 1 and 2, 21<i>s.</i>; vols. 3 and 4, 24<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Little Britain</i>; together with <i>The Spectre Bridegroom</i>, and <i>A
+Legend of Sleepy Hollow</i>. By <span class="smcap">Washington Irving</span>. An entirely
+New <i>Edition de luxe</i>, specially suitable for Presentation. Illustrated
+by 120 very fine Engravings on Wood, by Mr. <span class="smcap">J. D. Cooper</span>.
+Designed by Mr. <span class="smcap">Charles O. Murray</span>. Square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Little King; or, the Taming of a Young Russian Count.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">S. Blandy</span>. 64 Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer
+binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Little Mercy; or, For Better for Worse.</i> By <span class="smcap">Maude Jeanne
+Franc</span>, Author of "Marian," "Vermont Vale," &amp;c., &amp;c. Small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, 4<i>s.</i> Second Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Lost Sir Massingberd.</i> New Edition, crown 8vo, boards, coloured
+wrapper, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's German Series</i>&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>1. The Illustrated German Primer.</b> Being the easiest introduction
+to the study of German for all beginners. 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>2. The Children's own German Book.</b> A Selection of Amusing
+and Instructive Stories in Prose. Edited by Dr. <span class="smcap">A. L. Meissner</span>.
+Small post 8vo, cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>3. The First German Reader, for Children from Ten to
+Fourteen.</b> Edited by Dr. <span class="smcap">A. L. Meissner</span>. Small post 8vo,
+cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>4. The Second German Reader.</b> Edited by Dr. <span class="smcap">A. L. Meissner</span>.
+Small post 8vo, cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="center s08"><i>Buchheim's Deutsche Prosa. Two Volumes, sold separately</i>:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>5. Schiller's Prosa.</b> Containing Selections from the Prose Works
+of Schiller, with Notes for English Students. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Buchheim</span>.
+Small post 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>6. Goethe's Prosa.</b> Selections from the Prose Works of Goethe,
+with Notes for English Students. By Dr. <span class="smcap">Buchheim</span>. Small
+post 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C17" id="Page_C17">17</a></span>
+<i>Low's International Series of Toy Books.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each; or
+Mounted on Linen, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">
+<b>1. Little Fred and his Fiddle</b>, from Asbjörnsen's "Norwegian
+Fairy Tales."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>2. The Lad and the North Wind</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>3. The Pancake</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>4. The Little Match Girl</b>, from H. C. Andersen's "Danish
+Fairy Tales."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>5. The Emperor's New Clothes</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>6. The Gallant Tin Soldier</b>, ditto.</p>
+
+<p class="review">The above in 1 vol., cloth extra, gilt edges, with the whole 36
+Coloured Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's Standard Library of Travel and Adventure.</i> Crown 8vo,
+bound uniformly in cloth extra, price 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>1. The Great Lone Land.</b> By Major <span class="smcap">W. F. Butler</span>, C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>2. The Wild North Land.</b> By Major <span class="smcap">W. F. Butler</span>, C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>3. How I found Livingstone.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. M. Stanley</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>4. The Threshold of the Unknown Region.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. R. Markham</span>.
+(4th Edition, with Additional Chapters, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>)</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>5. A Whaling-Cruise to Baffin's Bay and the Gulf of Boothia.</b>
+By <span class="smcap">A. H. Markham</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>6. Campaigning on the Oxus.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. A. MacGahan</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>7. Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.</b> By <span class="smcap">Major W. F.
+Butler</span>, C.B.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>8. Ocean to Ocean.</b> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">George M. Grant</span>. With
+Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>9. Cruise of the Challenger.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. J. J. Spry</span>, R.N.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>10. Schweinfurth's Heart of Africa.</b> 2 vols., 15<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>11. Through the Dark Continent.</b> By <span class="smcap">H. M. Stanley</span>, 1 vol.,
+12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+X/</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's Standard Novels.</i> Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i> each, cloth extra.</p>
+
+<p class="country">
+<b>My Lady Greensleeves.</b> By <span class="smcap">Helen Mathers</span>, Authoress of
+"Comin' through the Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &amp;c.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Three Feathers.</b> By <span class="smcap">William Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Daughter of Heth.</b> 13th Edition. By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>. With
+Frontispiece by <span class="smcap">F. Walker</span>, A.R.A.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Kilmeny.</b> A Novel. By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>In Silk Attire.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Black</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>History of a Crime</b>: The Story of the Coup d'Etat. By <span class="smcap">Victor
+Hugo</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C18" id="Page_C18">18</a></span>
+<b>Alice Lorraine.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Lorna Doone.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>. 8th Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Cradock Nowell.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Clara Vaughan.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Cripps the Carrier.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Erema; or, My Father's Sin.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Mary Anerley.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Innocent.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Oliphant</span>. Eight Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Work.</b> A Story of Experience. By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>. Illustrations.
+<i>See also</i> Rose Library.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The Afghan Knife.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. A. Sterndale</span>, Author of "Seonee."</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A French Heiress in her own Chateau.</b> By the Author of
+"One Only," "Constantia," &amp;c. Six Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Ninety-Three.</b> By <span class="smcap">Victor Hugo</span>. Numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>My Wife and I.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher Stowe</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Wreck of the Grosvenor.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>John Holdsworth</b> (Chief Mate). By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Elinor Dryden.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Diane.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Macquoid</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Poganuc People, Their Loves and Lives.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher
+Stowe</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Golden Sorrow.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Cashel Hoey</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Story of the Dragonnades; or, Asylum Christi.</b> By the Rev.
+<span class="smcap">E. Gilliat</span>, M.A.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Low's Handbook to the Charities of London.</i> Edited and
+revised to date by <span class="smcap">C. Mackeson</span>, F.S.S., Editor of "A Guide to the
+Churches of London and its Suburbs," &amp;c. Paper, 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>MacGahan (J. A.) Campaigning on the Oxus, and the
+Fall of Khiva.</i> With Map and numerous Illustrations, 4th Edition,
+small post 8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Macgregor (John) "Rob Roy" on the Baltic.</i> 3rd Edition,
+small post 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Thousand Miles in the "Rob Roy" Canoe.</i> 11th
+Edition, small post 8vo, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Description of the "Rob Roy" Canoe</i>, with Plans,
+&amp;c., 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Voyage Alone in the Yawl "Rob Roy."</i> New
+Edition; thoroughly revised, with additions, small post 8vo, 5<i>s.</i>;
+boards, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C19" id="Page_C19">19</a></span>
+<i>Mackenzie (D.) The Flooding of the Sahara.</i> By <span class="smcap">Donald
+Mackenzie</span>. 8vo, cloth extra, with Illustrations, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Macquoid (Mrs.) Elinor Dryden.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Diane.</i> Crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Magazine.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Harper</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Markham (C. R.) The Threshold of the unknown Region.</i>
+Crown 8vo, with Four Maps, 4th Edition. Cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Maury (Commander) Physical Geography of the Sea, and its
+Meteorology.</i> Being a Reconstruction and Enlargement of his former
+Work, with Charts and Diagrams. New Edition, crown 8vo, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Memoirs of Count Miot de Melito.</i> 2 vols., demy 8vo, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Memoirs of Madame de Rémusat, 1802-1808.</i> By her Grandson,
+<span class="smcap">M. Paul de Rémusat</span>, Senator. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Cashel
+Hoey</span> and Mr. <span class="smcap">John Lillie</span>. 4th Edition, cloth extra. This
+work was written by Madame de Rémusat during the time she
+was living on the most intimate terms with the Empress Josephine,
+and is full of revelations respecting the private life of Bonaparte, and
+of men and politics of the first years of the century. Revelations
+which have already created a great sensation in Paris. 8vo, 2 vols., 32<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Menus (366, one for each day of the year).</i> Translated from the
+French of <span class="smcap">Count Brisse</span>, by Mrs. <span class="smcap">Matthew Clarke</span>. Crown
+8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Men of Mark: a Gallery of Contemporary Portraits of the most
+Eminent Men of the Day taken from Life</i>, especially for this publication,
+price 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> monthly. Vols. I., II., III., IV., and V., handsomely
+bound, cloth, gilt edges, 25<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Mendelssohn Family (The).</i> Translated from the German of
+<span class="smcap">E. Bock</span>. Demy 8vo, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Michael Strogoff.</i> 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 5<i>s.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Verne</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Mitford (Miss).</i> <i>See</i> "Our Village."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Military Maxims.</i> By <span class="smcap">Captain B. Terling</span>. Medium 16mo,
+in roan case, with pencil for the pocket, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Mountain and Prairie: a Journey from Victoria to Winnipeg,
+viâ Peace River Pass.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Daniel M. Gordon</span>, B.D.,
+Ottawa. Small post 8vo, with Maps and Illustrations, cloth extra,
+8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Music.</i> <i>See</i> "Great Musicians."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>My Lady Greensleeves.</i> By <span class="smcap">Helen Mathers</span>, Authoress of
+"Comin' through the Rye," "Cherry Ripe," &amp;c. 1 vol. edition,
+crown 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C20" id="Page_C20">20</a></span>
+<i>Mysterious Island.</i> By <span class="smcap">Jules Verne</span>. 3 vols., imperial 16mo.
+150 Illustrations, cloth gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each; elaborately bound, gilt
+edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each. Cheap Edition, with some of the Illustrations,
+cloth, gilt, 2<i>s.</i>; paper, 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>National Music of the World.</i> By the late <span class="smcap">Henry F.
+Chorley</span>. Edited by <span class="smcap">H. G. Hewlett</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth, 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Naval Brigade in South Africa (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry F. Norbury</span>,
+C.B., R.N. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Child's Play (A).</i> Sixteen Drawings by E. V. B. Beautifully
+printed in colours, 4to, cloth extra, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Guinea (A Few Months in).</i> By <span class="smcap">Octavius C. Stone</span>,
+F.R.G.S. With numerous Illustrations from the Author's own
+Drawings. Crown 8vo, cloth, 12<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>What I did and what I saw.</i> By <span class="smcap">L. M. D'Albertis</span>,
+Officer of the Order of the Crown of Italy, Honorary Member and
+Gold Medallist of the I.R.G.S., C.M.Z.S., &amp;c., &amp;c. In 2 vols.,
+demy 8vo, cloth extra, with Maps, Coloured Plates, and numerous
+very fine Woodcut Illustrations, 42<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Ireland.</i> By <span class="smcap">A. M. Sullivan</span>, M.P. for Louth. 2 vols.,
+demy 8vo, 30<i>s.</i> Cheaper Edition, 1 vol., crown 8vo, 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>New Novels.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> per vol.:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Mary Marston.</b> By <span class="smcap">George MacDonald</span>. 3 vols. Third Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Sarah de Beranger.</b> By <span class="smcap">Jean Ingelow</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Don John.</b> By <span class="smcap">Jean Ingelow</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Sunrise</b>: A Story of these Times. By <span class="smcap">William Black</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Sailor's Sweetheart.</b> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>, Author of "The
+Wreck of the Grosvenor," "John Holdsworth," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Lisa Lena.</b> By <span class="smcap">Edward Jenkins</span>, Author of "Ginx's Baby."
+2 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>A Plot of the Present Day.</b> By <span class="smcap">Kate Hope</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Black Abbey.</b> By <span class="smcap">M. Crommelin</span>, Author of "Queenie," &amp;c.
+3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Flower o' the Broom.</b> By the Author of "Rare Pale Margaret,"
+3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The Grandidiers</b>: A Tale of Berlin. Translated from the German
+by Captain <span class="smcap">Wm. Savile</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Errant</b>: A Life Story of Latter-Day Chivalry. By <span class="smcap">Percy Greg</span>,
+Author of "Across the Zodiac," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Fancy Free.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. Gibbon</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>The Stillwater Tragedy.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. B. Aldrich</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Prince Fortune and Prince Fatal.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Carrington</span>,
+Author of "My Cousin Maurice," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C21" id="Page_C21">21</a></span>
+<b>An English Squire.</b> By <span class="smcap">C. B. Coleridge</span>, Author of "Lady
+Betty," "Hanbury Wills," &amp;c. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Christowell.</b> By <span class="smcap">R. D. Blackmore</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Mr. Caroli.</b> By Miss <span class="smcap">Seguin</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>David Broome, Artist.</b> By Miss <span class="smcap">O'Reilly</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><b>Braes of Yarrow.</b> By <span class="smcap">Chas. Gibbon</span>. 3 vols.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Nice and Her Neighbours.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Canon Hole</span>, Author
+of "A Book about Roses," "A Little Tour in Ireland," &amp;c. Small
+4to, with numerous choice Illustrations, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Noble Words and Noble Deeds.</i> From the French of <span class="smcap">E. Muller</span>.
+Containing many Full-page Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Philippoteaux</span>. Square
+imperial 16mo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, plain edges, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>North American Review (The).</i> Monthly, price 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Nothing to Wear; and Two Millions.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. A. Butler</span>.
+New Edition. Small post 8vo, in stiff coloured wrapper, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Nursery Playmates (Prince of).</i> 217 Coloured pictures for
+Children by eminent Artists. Folio, in coloured boards, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Oberammergau Passion Play.</i> <i>See</i> "Art in the
+Mountains."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>O'Brien.</i> <i>See</i> "Parliamentary History" and "Irish Land
+Question."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Old-Fashioned Girl.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>On Horseback through Asia Minor.</i> By Capt. <span class="smcap">Fred Burnaby</span>,
+Royal Horse Guards, Author of "A Ride to Khiva." 2 vols.,
+8vo, with three Maps and Portrait of Author, 6th Edition, 38<i>s.</i>;
+Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Our Little Ones in Heaven.</i> Edited by the Rev. <span class="smcap">H. Robbins</span>.
+With Frontispiece after Sir <span class="smcap">Joshua Reynolds</span>. Fcap., cloth extra,
+New Edition&mdash;the 3rd, with Illustrations, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Our Village.</i> By <span class="smcap">Mary Russell Mitford</span>. Illustrated with
+Frontispiece Steel Engraving, and 12 full-page and 157 smaller Cuts
+of Figure Subjects and Scenes. Crown 4to, cloth, gilt edges, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Our Woodland Trees.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Large post 8vo,
+cloth, gilt edges, uniform with "Fern World" and "Fern Paradise,"
+by the same Author. 8 Coloured Plates (showing leaves of every
+British Tree) and 20 Woodcuts, cloth, gilt edges, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Third
+Edition.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C22" id="Page_C22">22</a></span>
+<i>Painters of All Schools.</i> By <span class="smcap">Louis Viardot</span>, and other
+Writers. 500 pp., super-royal 8vo, 20 Full-page and 70 smaller
+Engravings, cloth extra, 25<i>s.</i> A New Edition is issued in Half-crown
+parts, with fifty additional portraits, cloth, gilt edges, 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Painting (A Short History of the British School of).</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Geo. H. Shepherd</span>. Post 8vo, cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Palliser (Mrs.) A History of Lace, from the Earliest Period.</i>
+A New and Revised Edition, with additional cuts and text, upwards
+of 100 Illustrations and coloured Designs. 1 vol., 8vo, 1<i>l.</i> 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Historic Devices, Badges, and War Cries.</i> 8vo, 1<i>l.</i> 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The China Collector's Pocket Companion.</i> With upwards
+of 1000 Illustrations of Marks and Monograms. 2nd Edition,
+with Additions. Small post 8vo, limp cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question (The).</i> From
+1829 to 1869, and the Origin and Results of the Ulster Custom. By
+<span class="smcap">R. Barry O'Brien</span>, Barrister-at-Law, Author of "The Irish Land
+Question and English Public Opinion." 3rd Edition, corrected and
+revised, with additional matter. Post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P., in a Letter to the Author, says:&mdash;
+"I thank you for kindly sending me your work, and I hope that the sad and discreditable
+story which you have told so well in your narrative of the Irish Land
+Question may be useful at a period when we have more than ever of reason to desire
+that it should be thoroughly understood."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Pathways of Palestine: a Descriptive Tour through the Holy
+Land.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">Canon Tristram</span>. Illustrated with 44 permanent
+Photographs. (The Photographs are large, and most perfect
+Specimens of the Art.) Published in 22 Monthly Parts, 4to, in
+Wrapper, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="review">"... The Photographs which illustrate these pages may justly claim, as works
+of art, to be the most admirably executed views which have been produced....</p>
+
+<p class="review">"As the writer is on the point of making a fourth visit of exploration to the
+country, any new discoveries which come under observation will be at once incorporated
+in this work."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Peasant Life in the West of England.</i> By <span class="smcap">Francis George
+Heath</span>, Author of "Sylvan Spring," "The Fern World." Crown
+8vo, about 350 pp., 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Petites Leçons de Conversation et de Grammaire: Oral and
+Conversational Method; being Lessons introducing the most Useful
+Topics of Conversation, upon an entirely new principle, &amp;c.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">F. Julien</span>, French Master at King Edward the Sixth's School,
+Birmingham. Author of "The Student's French Examiner," "First
+Steps in Conversational French Grammar," which see.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Phillips (L.) Dictionary of Biographical Reference.</i> 8vo,
+1<i>l.</i> 11<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Photography (History and Handbook of).</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Tissandier</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C23" id="Page_C23">23</a></span>
+<i>Physical Treatise on Electricity and Magnetism.</i> By <span class="smcap">J. E. H.
+Gordon, B.A.</span> With about 200 coloured, full-page, and other
+Illustrations. Among the newer portions of the work may be
+enumerated: All the more recent investigations on Striæ by Spottiswoode,
+De la Rue, Moulton, &amp;c., an account of Mr. Crooke's recent
+researches; full descriptions and pictures of all the modern Magnetic
+Survey Instruments now used at Kew Observatory; full accounts of
+all the modern work on Specific Inductive Capacity, and of the more
+recent determination of the ratio of Electric units (v). In respect to
+the number and beauty of the Illustrations, the work is quite unique.
+2 vols., 8vo, 36<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Pinto (Major Serpa).</i> <i>See</i> "How I Crossed Africa."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Plutarch's Lives.</i> An Entirely New and Library Edition.
+Edited by <span class="smcap">A. H. Clough</span>, Esq. 5 vols., 8vo, 2<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i>; half-morocco,
+gilt top, 3<i>l.</i> Also in 1 vol., royal 8vo, 800 pp., cloth extra, 18<i>s.</i>;
+half-bound, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Poems of the Inner Life.</i> A New Edition, Revised, with many
+additional Poems. Small post 8vo, cloth, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Poganuc People: their Loves and Lives.</i> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher
+Stowe</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Polar Expeditions.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Koldewey</span>, <span class="smcap">Markham</span>, <span class="smcap">MacGahan</span>,
+and <span class="smcap">Nares</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Poynter (Edward J., R.A.).</i> <i>See</i> "Illustrated Text-books."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Practical (A) Handbook to the Principal Schools of England.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">C. E. Pascoe</span>. New Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Prejevalsky (N. M.) From Kulja, across the Tian Shan to Lobnor.</i>
+Translated by <span class="smcap">E. Delmar Morgan, F.R.G.S.</span> Demy 8vo,
+with a Map. 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Primitive Folk Moots; or, Open-Air Assemblies in Britain.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">George Laurence Gomme, F.S.A.</span>, Honorary Secretary to the
+Folk-Lore Society, Author of "Index of Municipal Offices." 1 vol.,
+crown 8vo, cloth, 12<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">This work deals with an earlier phase of the history of English
+Institutions than has yet been attempted.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Publisher's Circular (The), and General Record of British and
+Foreign Literature.</i> Published on the 1st and 15th of every Month, 3<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Pyrenees (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry Blackburn</span>. With 100 Illustrations
+by <span class="smcap">Gustave Doré</span>, a New Map of Routes, and Information for
+Travellers, corrected to 1881. With a description of Lourdes in 1880.
+Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Rambaud
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C24" id="Page_C24">24</a></span>
+(Alfred). History of Russia, from its Origin
+to the Year 1877.</i> With Six Maps. Translated by Mrs. <span class="smcap">L. B.
+Lan</span>. 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 38<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Recollections of Writers.</i> By <span class="smcap">Charles</span> and <span class="smcap">Mary Cowden
+Clarke</span>. Authors of "The Concordance to Shakespeare," &amp;c.;
+with Letters of <span class="smcap">Charles Lamb</span>, <span class="smcap">Leigh Hunt</span>, <span class="smcap">Douglas Jerrold</span>,
+and <span class="smcap">Charles Dickens</span>; and a Preface by <span class="smcap">Mary Cowden Clarke</span>.
+Crown 8vo, cloth, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rémusat (Madame de).</i> <i>See</i> "Memoirs of."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Robinson (Phil).</i> <i>See</i> "In my Indian Garden," "Under the
+Punkah."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rochefoucauld's Reflections.</i> Bayard Series, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rogers (S.) Pleasures of Memory.</i> <i>See</i> "Choice Editions of
+Choice Books." 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Rose in Bloom.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>The Rose Library.</i> Popular Literature of all countries. Each
+volume, 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Many of the Volumes are Illustrated&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="country">1. <b>Sea-Gull Rock.</b> By <span class="smcap">Jules Sandeau</span>. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">2. <b>Little Women.</b> By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">3. <b>Little Women Wedded.</b> Forming a Sequel to "Little Women."</p>
+
+<p class="country">4. <b>The House on Wheels.</b> By <span class="smcap">Madame de Stolz</span>. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">5. <b>Little Men.</b> By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>. Dble. vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">6. <b>The Old-Fashioned Girl.</b> By <span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>. Double
+vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">7. <b>The Mistress of the Manse.</b> By <span class="smcap">J. G. Holland</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">8. <b>Timothy Titcomb's Letters to Young People, Single and
+Married.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">9. <b>Undine, and the Two Captains.</b> By Baron <span class="smcap">De La Motte
+Fouqué</span>. A New Translation by <span class="smcap">F. E. Bunnett</span>. Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">10. <b>Draxy Miller's Dowry, and the Elder's Wife.</b> By <span class="smcap">Saxe
+Holm</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">11. <b>The Four Gold Pieces.</b> By Madame <span class="smcap">Gouraud</span>. Numerous
+Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country">12. <b>Work.</b> A Story of Experience. First Portion. By <span class="smcap">Louisa M.
+Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">13. <b>Beginning Again.</b> Being a Continuation of "Work." By
+<span class="smcap">Louisa M. Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="country">14. <b>Picciola; or, the Prison Flower.</b> By <span class="smcap">X. B. Saintine</span>.
+Numerous Graphic Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C25" id="Page_C25">25</a></span>
+15. <b>Robert's Holidays.</b> Illustrated.</p>
+
+<p class="country">16. <b>The Two Children of St. Domingo.</b> Numerous Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="country">17. <b>Aunt Jo's Scrap Bag.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">18. <b>Stowe (Mrs. H. B.) The Pearl of Orr's Island.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">19. &mdash;&mdash; <b>The Minister's Wooing.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">20. &mdash;&mdash; <b>Betty's Bright Idea.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">21. &mdash;&mdash; <b>The Ghost in the Mill.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">22. &mdash;&mdash; <b>Captain Kidd's Money.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">23. &mdash;&mdash; <b>We and our Neighbours.</b> Double vol., 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">24. &mdash;&mdash; <b>My Wife and I.</b> Double vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth, gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">25. <b>Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">26. <b>Lowell's My Study Window.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">27. <b>Holmes (O. W.) The Guardian Angel.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">28. <b>Warner (C. D.) My Summer in a Garden.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">29. <b>Hitherto.</b> By the Author of "The Gayworthys." 2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</p>
+
+<p class="country">30. <b>Helen's Babies.</b> By their Latest Victim.</p>
+
+<p class="country">31. <b>The Barton Experiment.</b> By the Author of "Helen's Babies."</p>
+
+<p class="country">32. <b>Dred.</b> By Mrs. <span class="smcap">Beecher Stowe</span>. Double vol., 2<i>s.</i>; cloth,
+gilt, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="country">33. <b>Warner (C. D.)</b> <b>In the Wilderness.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">34. <b>Six to One.</b> A Seaside Story.</p>
+
+<p class="country">35. <b>Nothing to Wear, and Two Millions.</b></p>
+
+<p class="country">36. <b>Farm Ballads.</b> By <span class="smcap">Will Carleton</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Russell (W. Clarke).</i> <i>See</i> "A Sailor's Sweetheart," 3 vols.,
+31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; "Wreck of the Grosvenor," 6<i>s.</i>; "John Holdsworth (Chief
+Mate)," 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Russell (W. H., LL.D.) The Tour of the Prince of Wales in
+India.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. Russell, LL.D.</span> Fully Illustrated by <span class="smcap">Sydney
+P. Hall, M.A.</span> Super-royal 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 52<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+Large Paper Edition, 84<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Sancta Christina: a Story of the First Century.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Eleanor E. Orlebar</span>. With a Preface by the Bishop of Winchester.
+Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Seonee: Sporting in the Satpura Range of Central India, and in
+the Valley of the Nerbudda.</i> By <span class="smcap">R. A. Sterndale, F.R.G.S.</span> 8vo,
+with numerous Illustrations, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Seven Years in South Africa: Travels, Researches, and Hunting
+Adventures between the Diamond-Fields and the Zambesi (1872-1879).</i>
+By Dr. <span class="smcap">Emil Holub</span>. With over 100 Original Illustrations
+and 4 Maps. In 2 vols., demy 8vo, cloth extra, 42<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Serpent
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C26" id="Page_C26">26</a></span>
+Charmer (The): a Tale of the Indian Mutiny.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">Louis Rousselet</span>, Author of "India and its Native Princes."
+Numerous Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Shakespeare (The Boudoir).</i> Edited by <span class="smcap">Henry Cundell</span>.
+Carefully bracketted for reading aloud; freed from all objectionable
+matter, and altogether free from notes. Price 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> each volume,
+cloth extra, gilt edges. Contents:&mdash;Vol. I., Cymbeline&mdash;Merchant of
+Venice. Each play separately, paper cover, 1<i>s.</i> Vol. II., As You
+Like It&mdash;King Lear&mdash;Much Ado about Nothing. Vol. III., Romeo
+and Juliet&mdash;Twelfth Night&mdash;King John. The latter six plays separately,
+paper cover, 9<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Shakespeare Key (The).</i> Forming a Companion to "The
+Complete Concordance to Shakespeare." By <span class="smcap">Charles</span> and <span class="smcap">Mary
+Cowden Clarke</span>. Demy 8vo, 800 pp., 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Shooting: its Appliances, Practice, and Purpose.</i> By <span class="smcap">James
+Dalziel Dougall, F.S.A., F.Z.A.</span>, Author of "Scottish Field
+Sports," &amp;c. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"The book is admirable in every way.... We wish it every success."&mdash;<i>Globe.</i></p>
+
+<p class="review">"A very complete treatise.... Likely to take high rank as an authority on
+shooting."&mdash;<i>Daily News.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Silent Hour (The).</i> <i>See</i> "Gentle Life Series."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Silver Pitchers.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Alcott</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Simon (Jules).</i> <i>See</i> "Government of M. Thiers."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Six to One.</i> A Seaside Story. 16mo, boards, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Smith (G.) Assyrian Explorations and Discoveries</i>. By the late
+<span class="smcap">George Smith</span>. Illustrated by Photographs and Woodcuts. Demy
+8vo, 6th Edition, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Chaldean Account of Genesis.</i> By the late
+<span class="smcap">G. Smith</span>, of the Department of Oriental Antiquities, British Museum.
+With many Illustrations. Demy 8vo, cloth extra, 6th Edition, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; An entirely New Edition, completely revised and rewritten
+by the Rev. <span class="smcap">Professor Sayce</span>, Queen's College, Oxford.
+Demy 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Snow-Shoes and Canoes; or, the Adventures of a Fur-Hunter
+in the Hudson's Bay Territory.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. 2nd
+Edition. With numerous Illustrations. Square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C27" id="Page_C27">27</a></span>
+<i>Songs and Etchings in Shade and Sunshine.</i> By J. E. G.
+Illustrated with 44 Etchings. Small 4to, cloth, gilt tops, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>South African Campaign, 1879 (The).</i> Compiled by <span class="smcap">J. P.
+Mackinnon</span> (formerly 72nd Highlanders), and <span class="smcap">S. H. Shadbolt</span>;
+and dedicated, by permission, to Field-Marshal H.R.H. The Duke
+of Cambridge. 4to, handsomely bound in cloth extra, 2<i>l.</i> 10<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>South Kensington Museum.</i> Published, with the sanction of
+the Science and Art Department, in Monthly Parts, each containing
+8 Plates, price 1<i>s.</i> Volume I., containing 12 numbers, handsomely
+bound, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Stanley (H. M.) How I Found Livingstone.</i> Crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> ; large Paper Edition, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>"My Kalulu," Prince, King, and Slave.</i> A Story
+from Central Africa. Crown 8vo, about 430 pp., with numerous graphic
+Illustrations, after Original Designs by the Author. Cloth, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Coomassie and Magdala.</i> A Story of Two British
+Campaigns in Africa. Demy 8vo, with Maps and Illustrations, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Through the Dark Continent</i>, which see.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story of a Mountain (The).</i> By <span class="smcap">E. Reclus</span>. Translated by
+<span class="smcap">Bertha Ness</span>. 8vo, with Illustrations, cloth extra, gilt edges,
+7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story of a Soldiers Life (The); or, Peace, War, and Mutiny.</i>
+By Lieut.-General <span class="smcap">John Alexander Ewart, C.B.</span>, Aide-de-Camp
+to the Queen from 1859 to 1872. 2 vols., demy 8vo, with Illustrations.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story of the Zulu Campaign (The).</i> By Major <span class="smcap">Ashe</span> (late
+King's Dragoon Guards), and Captain the Hon. <span class="smcap">E. V. Wyatt-Edgell</span>
+(late 17th Lancers, killed at Ulundi). Dedicated by special
+permission to Her Imperial Highness the Empress Eugénie. 8vo, 16<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Story without an End.</i> From the German of Carové, by the late
+Mrs. <span class="smcap">Sarah T. Austin</span>. Crown 4to, with 15 Exquisite Drawings
+by E. V. B., printed in Colours in Fac-simile of the original Water
+Colours; and numerous other Illustrations. New Edition, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; square 4to, with Illustrations by <span class="smcap">Harvey</span>. 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Stowe (Mrs. Beecher) Dred.</i> Cheap Edition, boards, 2<i>s.</i> Cloth,
+gilt edges, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C28" id="Page_C28">28</a></span>
+<i>Stowe (Mrs. Beecher) Footsteps of the Master.</i> With Illustrations
+and red borders. Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Geography</i>, with 60 Illustrations. Square cloth, 4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Foxes.</i> Cheap Edition, 1<i>s.</i>; Library Edition,
+4<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Betty's Bright Idea.</i> 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>My Wife and I; or, Harry Henderson's History.</i>
+Small post 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i><a name="FNanchor_C" id="FNanchor_C" href="#Footnote_C" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Minister's Wooing.</i> 5<i>s.</i>; Copyright Series, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cl., 2<i>s.</i><a href="#Footnote_C" class="fnanchor">[C]</a></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Old Town Folk.</i> 6<i>s.</i>; Cheap Edition, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Old Town Fireside Stories.</i> Cloth extra, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Our Folks at Poganuc.</i> 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>We and our Neighbours.</i> 1 vol., small post 8vo, 6<i>s.</i>
+Sequel to "My Wife and I."[See also Rose Library]</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Pink and White Tyranny.</i> Small post 8vo, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>
+Cheap Edition, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> and 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Queer Little People.</i> 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Chimney Corner.</i> 1<i>s.</i>; cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>The Pearl of Orr's Island.</i> Crown 8vo, 5<i>s.</i>[See also Rose Library]</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Little Pussey Willow.</i> Fcap., 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Woman in Sacred History.</i> Illustrated with 15
+Chromo-lithographs and about 200 pages of Letterpress. Dem
+4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 25<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Student's French Examiner.</i> By <span class="smcap">F. Julien</span>, Author of "Petites
+Leçons de Conversation et de Grammaire." Square crown 8vo, cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Studies in German Literature.</i> By <span class="smcap">Bayard Taylor</span>. Edited
+by <span class="smcap">Marie Taylor</span>. With an Introduction by the Hon. <span class="smcap">George
+H. Boker</span>. 8vo, cloth extra, 10<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C29" id="Page_C29">29</a></span>
+<i>Studies in the Theory of Descent.</i> By Dr. <span class="smcap">Aug. Weismann</span>,
+Professor in the University of Freiburg. Translated and edited by
+<span class="smcap">Raphael Meldola, F.C.S.</span>, Secretary of the Entomological Society
+of London. Part I.&mdash;"On the Seasonal Dimorphism of Butterflies,"
+containing Original Communications by Mr. <span class="smcap">W. H. Edwards</span>, of
+Coalburgh. With two Coloured Plates. Price of Part. I. (to Subscribers
+for the whole work only), 8<i>s.</i>; Part II. (6 coloured plates), 16<i>s.</i>;
+Part III., 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sugar Beet (The).</i> Including a History of the Beet Sugar
+Industry in Europe, Varieties of the Sugar Beet, Examination, Soils,
+Tillage, Seeds and Sowing, Yield and Cost of Cultivation, Harvesting,
+Transportation, Conservation, Feeding Qualities of the Beet and of
+the Pulp, &amp;c. By <span class="smcap">L. S. Ware</span>. Illustrated. 8vo, cloth extra, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sullivan (A. M., M.P.).</i> <i>See</i> "New Ireland."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sulphuric Acid (A Practical Treatise on the Manufacture of).</i>
+By A. G. and <span class="smcap">C. G. Lock</span>, Consulting Chemical Engineers. With
+77 Construction Plates, and other Illustrations. Royal 8vo, 2<i>l.</i> 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sumner (Hon. Charles).</i> <i>See</i> Life and Letters.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sunrise: A Story of These Times.</i> By <span class="smcap">William Black</span>,
+Author of "A Daughter of Heth," &amp;c. 3 vols., 31<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Surgeon's Handbook on the Treatment of Wounded in War.</i> By
+Dr. <span class="smcap">Friedrich Esmarch</span>, Professor of Surgery in the University of
+Kiel, and Surgeon-General to the Prussian Army. Translated by
+<span class="smcap">H. H. Clutton, B.A.</span> Cantab., F.R.C.S. Numerous Coloured
+Plates and Illustrations, 8vo, strongly bound in flexible leather, 1<i>l.</i> 8<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Sylvan Spring.</i> By <span class="smcap">Francis George Heath</span>. Illustrated by
+12 Coloured Plates, drawn by <span class="smcap">F. E. Hulme, F.L.S.</span>, Artist and
+Author of "Familiar Wild Flowers;" by 16 full-page, and more than
+100 other Wood Engravings. Large post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Tauchnitz's English Editions of German Authors.</i>
+Each volume, cloth flexible, 2<i>s.</i>; or sewed, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> (Catalogues post
+free on application.)</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>(B.) German and English Dictionary.</i> Cloth, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+roan, 2s,</p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>French and English.</i> Paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; roan
+2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C30" id="Page_C30">30</a></span>
+<i>Tauchnitz (B.) Italian and English Dictionary.</i> Paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>;
+cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; roan, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Spanish and English.</i> Paper, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; roan,
+2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>New Testament.</i> Cloth, 2<i>s.</i>; gilt, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Taylor (Bayard).</i> <i>See</i> "Studies in German Literature."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Through America; or, Nine Months in the United States.</i> By
+<span class="smcap">W. G. Marshall, M.A.</span> With nearly 100 Woodcuts of Views of
+Utah country and the famous Yosemite Valley; The Giant Trees,
+New York, Niagara, San Francisco, &amp;c.; containing a full account
+of Mormon Life, as noted by the Author during his visits to Salt Lake
+City in 1878 and 1879. In 1 vol., demy 8vo, 21<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Through the Dark Continent: The Sources of the Nile; Around
+the Great Lakes, and down the Congo.</i> By <span class="smcap">Henry M. Stanley</span>.
+2 vols., demy 8vo, containing 150 Full-page and other Illustrations,
+2 Portraits of the Author, and 10 Maps, 42<i>s.</i> Seventh Thousand.
+Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo, with some of the Illustrations and Maps.
+1 vol., 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Tour of the Prince of Wales in India.</i> <i>See</i> <span class="smcap">Russell</span>.</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Trees and Ferns</i>. By <span class="smcap">F. G. Heath</span>. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt
+edges, with numerous Illustrations, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Two Friends.</i> By <span class="smcap">Lucien Biart</span>, Author of "Adventures of
+a Young Naturalist," "My Rambles in the New World," &amp;c. Small
+post 8vo, numerous Illustrations, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Two Supercargoes (The); or, Adventures in Savage Africa.</i>
+By <span class="smcap">W. H. G. Kingston</span>. Numerous Full-page Illustrations. Square
+imperial 16mo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Under the Punkah.</i> By <span class="smcap">Phil Robinson</span>, Author of "In
+my Indian Garden." Crown 8vo, limp cloth, uniform with the
+above, 3<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Up and Down; or, Fifty Years' Experiences in Australia,
+California, New Zealand, India, China, and the South Pacific.</i>
+Being the Life History of Capt. <span class="smcap">W. J. Barry</span>. Written by Himself.
+With several Illustrations. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 8<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p><span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C31" id="Page_C31">31</a></span></p>
+
+<p class="center b12 p4"><b>BOOKS BY JULES VERNE.</b></p>
+
+<table class = "verne" summary = "Verne Books">
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc br"><span class="smcap">Large Crown</span> 8vo</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="4">Containing 350 to
+600 pp. and from
+50 to 100 full-page illustrations</td>
+<td colspan="4">Containing the whole
+of the text with some
+illustrations.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="tdc br bt">WORKS.</td>
+<td class="tdc br bt" colspan = "2">In very handsome cloth binding, gilt edges.</td>
+<td class="tdc br bt" colspan = "2">In plainer binding plain edges.</td>
+<td class="tdc br bt" colspan = "2">In cloth binding, gilt edges, smaller type.</td>
+<td class="tdc bt" colspan = "2">Coloured Boards</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br bt">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="bt"><i>s.</i></td>
+<td class="br bt"><i>d.</i></td>
+<td class="bt"><i>s.</i></td>
+<td class="br bt"><i>d.</i></td>
+<td class="bt"><i>s.</i></td>
+<td class="br bt"><i>d.</i></td>
+<td class="bt" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea. Part I.</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2">10</td>
+<td class="br " rowspan="2">6</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2">5</td>
+<td class="br " rowspan="2">0</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2">3</td>
+<td class="br " rowspan="2">6</td>
+<td class="" rowspan="2" colspan="2">2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">Twenty Thousand Leagues under the Sea. Part II.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">Hector Servadac</td>
+<td class="">10</td>
+<td class="br ">6</td>
+<td class="">5</td>
+<td class="br ">0</td>
+<td class="">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br ">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br ">The Fur Country</td>
+<td class="">10</td>
+<td class="br ">6</td>
+<td class="">5</td>
+<td class="br ">0</td>
+<td class="">3</td>
+<td class="br ">6</td>
+<td class="br " colspan="2">2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">From the Earth to the Moon and a Trip round it</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br" >6</td>
+<td>5</td>
+<td class="br" >0</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">2 vols., 2<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+<td colspan="2">2 vols., 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Michael Strogoff, the Courier of the Czar</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br" >6</td>
+<td>5</td>
+<td class="br" >0</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Dick Sands, the Boy Captain</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br" >6</td>
+<td>5</td>
+<td class="br" >0</td>
+<td>&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br">&nbsp;</td>
+<td><i>s.</i></td>
+<td><i>d.</i></td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Five Weeks in a Balloon</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Adventures of Three Englishmen and Three Russians</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Around the World in Eighty Days</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">A Floating City</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Blockade Runners</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Dr. Ox's Experiment</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Master Zacharius</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">A Drama in the Air</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">A Winter amid the Ice</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Survivors of the "Chancellor"</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td colspan = "2">2 vols. 1<i>s.</i> each.</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Martin Paz</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br"><span class="smcap">The Mysterious Island</span>, 3 vols.:&mdash;</td>
+<td>22</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>10</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>6</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. I. Dropped from the Clouds</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td>0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. II. Abandoned</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. III. Secret of the Island</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>2</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+<td>1</td>
+<td class="br">0</td>
+</tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Child of the Cavern.</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td>3</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Begum's Fortune</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">The Tribulations of a Chinaman</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br"><span class="smcap">The Steam House</span>, 2 vols.:&mdash;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. I. The Demon of Cawnpore</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+<tr>
+<td class="br">Vol. II. Tigers and Traitors</td>
+<td>7</td>
+<td class="br">6</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
+<td class="br" colspan="2">&nbsp;</td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<p class="s08"><span class="smcap">Celebrated Travels and Travellers.</span> 3 vols. Demy 8vo, 600 pp., upwards of 100
+full-page illustrations, 12<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; gilt edges, 14<i>s.</i> each:&mdash;</p>
+
+<p class="s08">(1) <span class="smcap">The Exploration of the World.</span></p>
+
+<p class="s08">(2) <span class="smcap">The Great Navigators of the Eighteenth Century.</span></p>
+
+<p class="s08">(3) <span class="smcap">The Great Explorers of the Nineteenth Century.</span></p>
+
+<p class="hanging p2"><i>Waller
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Page_C32" id="Page_C32">32</a></span>
+(Rev. C. H.) The Names on the Gates of Pearl,
+and other Studies.</i> By the Rev. <span class="smcap">C. H. Waller, M.A.</span> Second
+Edition. Crown 8vo, cloth extra, 6<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>A Grammar and Analytical Vocabulary of the Words in
+the Greek Testament.</i> Compiled from Brüder's Concordance. For
+the use of Divinity Students and Greek Testament Classes. By the
+Rev. <span class="smcap">C. H. Waller, M.A.</span> Part I., The Grammar. Small post 8vo,
+cloth, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i> Part II. The Vocabulary, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Adoption and the Covenant. Some Thoughts on
+Confirmation.</i> Super-royal 16mo, cloth limp, 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Warner (C. D.) My Summer in a Garden.</i> Rose Library, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Back-log Studies.</i> Boards, 1<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; cloth, 2<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>In the Wilderness.</i> Rose Library, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging">&mdash;&mdash; <i>Mummies and Moslems.</i> 8vo, cloth, 12<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Weaving.</i> <i>See</i> "History and Principles."</p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Wills, A Few Hints on Proving, without Professional Assistance.</i>
+By a <span class="smcap">Probate Court Official</span>. 5th Edition, revised with Forms
+of Wills, Residuary Accounts, &amp;c. Fcap. 8vo, cloth limp, 1<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>With Axe and Rifle on the Western Prairies.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. H. G.
+Kingston</span>. With numerous Illustrations, square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 7<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i>; plainer binding, 5<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Woolsey (C. D., LL.D.) Introduction to the Study of International
+Law; designed as an Aid in Teaching and in Historical
+Studies.</i> 5th Edition, demy 8vo, 18<i>s.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Words of Wellington: Maxims and Opinions, Sentences and
+Reflections of the Great Duke, gathered from his Despatches, Letters,
+and Speeches</i> (Bayard Series). 2<i>s.</i> 6<i>d.</i></p>
+
+<p class="hanging"><i>Wreck of the Grosvenor.</i> By <span class="smcap">W. Clark Russell</span>, Author of
+"John Holdsworth, Chief Mate," "A Sailor's Sweetheart," &amp;c. 6<i>s.</i>
+Third and Cheaper Edition.</p>
+<hr class="l30 p2" />
+<p class="center p2">London:<br />
+
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, &amp; RIVINGTON,<br />
+
+<span class="s08">CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET, E.C.</span></p>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol.
+II (of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II
+(of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol. II (of 2)
+ A Record of a Ramble in the United States and Canada in
+ the Spring and Summer of 1881
+
+Author: W. H. Russell
+
+Release Date: December 1, 2013 [EBook #44333]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Melissa McDaniel and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ Inconsistent hyphenation and spelling in the original document have
+ been preserved. Obvious typographical errors have been corrected.
+
+ Italic text is denoted by _underscores_. Bold text is denoted by
+ =equals signs=.
+
+ On page 26 Count Fritz Thumb should possibly be Count FritzThumb.
+
+ On page 120 Indianopolis should possibly be Indianapolis.
+
+ On page 124, General How should possibly be General Howe.
+
+ A triangle symbol in the text is represented as [**triangle]
+
+
+
+
+ HESPEROTHEN;
+ NOTES FROM THE WEST:
+ A RECORD OF A
+ RAMBLE IN THE UNITED STATES AND CANADA
+ IN THE SPRING AND SUMMER OF 1881.
+
+ BY
+ W. H. RUSSELL, LL.D.
+ BARRISTER-AT-LAW.
+
+ IN TWO VOLUMES.
+
+ VOL. II.
+
+ LONDON:
+ SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+ CROWN BUILDINGS, 188 FLEET STREET.
+ 1882.
+
+ [All rights reserved.]
+
+
+
+
+ LONDON:
+ PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED,
+ STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. II.
+
+
+ CHAPTER I.
+
+ ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific Page 1
+
+
+ CHAPTER II.
+
+ THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber 19
+
+
+ CHAPTER III.
+
+ SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea-Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!" 44
+
+
+ CHAPTER IV.
+
+ CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Canyon 73
+
+
+ CHAPTER V.
+
+ KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of
+ Travel--A Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to
+ New York 107
+
+
+ CHAPTER VI.
+
+ NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our Last Day in America 122
+
+
+ CHAPTER VII.
+
+ RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home 140
+
+
+ CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great Courtesy to
+ Strangers--Manners and Customs 151
+
+
+ CHAPTER IX.
+
+ THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the Maori
+ 186
+
+
+
+
+HESPEROTHEN.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ARIZONA.
+
+ Deming--The Mirage--Ruined Cities--American
+ Explorers--Self-Tormentors--Animals and
+ Plants--Yuma--California--Los Angeles--Santa Monica--The
+ Pacific.
+
+
+_May 30th._--At an hour as to which controversy might arise, owing to
+the changes of time to which we have been subjected, the train, which
+had pulled up but seldom during the night, stopped at Deming Junction,
+where the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad "connects" with
+the Southern Pacific, on which our cars were to be "hauled" to San
+Francisco. Jefferson time and San Francisco time differ two hours, so
+at one end of the station we scored 6 A.M., and at the other 8 A.M.
+The sooner one gets away from Deming in any direction the better. A
+year ago--as is usually the case hereabouts--there was not a trace of
+a town on the dry ugly plain covered with prickly acacias and "Spanish
+bayonets"; now Deming flourishes in gaming and drinking saloons,
+express offices, and all the horrors of "enterprise" in the West. The
+look-out revealed a few tents, wooden shanties, a station, at which
+workmen were running up a frame-house, ground littered with preserved
+provision tins, broken crockery, adobes and refuse of all sorts. At
+the door of one hut, swarming with flies, swung half a carcase of beef;
+two women were washing, pale-faced, but not uncheerful creatures, who
+had not a good opinion of Deming and its population. "They carry out a
+dead man a day, or used to," said one informant. The lady washerwomen
+did not quite corroborate the figure; but, remarked the chattier
+of the two, "there was a considerable shewtin' about last night!"
+To the observation of one of the party that he was "going to have a
+look about," the other lady made reply, "I guess if you dew it will
+be 'hands up' for ten cents with you." On the platform was a United
+States marshal, with a revolver stuck in his belt, but his duties were
+considered to be punitive rather than preventive. Here Mr. Chase and
+Mr. Hawley left us to return to Topeka. At the abschiednehmen Sir H.
+Green was affected by a proof of interest in his welfare of a touching
+character and very full of local colour; one of our friends beckoned
+to him, took him aside, and pulling out a revolver ("It is hands up!"
+thought Sir Henry), fully loaded, pressed it on his acceptance in the
+kindest manner as a useful _compagnon de voyage_. As we were not to
+stay at Deming, the self-sacrifice was not consummated.
+
+The regular train having come up, our special was tacked on to it, and
+in an hour the locomotive puffed out of the depot, and sped westerly
+on its way at the rate of twenty miles an hour, across a plain some
+fifteen miles broad, bordered by jagged, irregular mountain ranges
+north and south, as dry as a bone--so dry that water for the engine
+has to be brought to the stations in tanks. A scanty growth of what
+looked like camel grass, interspersed euphorbias and cactuses of great
+height, was all that met the eye. We are approaching the great basin of
+Arizona, and are warned that much dust and great heat must be expected,
+and that the "scenery" does not improve in point of variety or verdure,
+both of which are nearly at zero. A vigorous, well-directed campaign
+against the flies in the saloon gave us comparative repose; then the
+blinds being pulled down, and the thermometer reduced to 83 deg.,
+society settled itself to study, with results indicated presently by
+a gentle _susurrus_ on the sofas. A sudden alarm, "Look at the deer!"
+There sure enough was a herd of antelopes flying over the scrub towards
+the horizon, which flickered about in the heat in a mirage of islands
+and uplifted mountain ends--so vanished.
+
+After passing Lordsburgh, a desolate spot in the desert, there appeared
+a beautiful mirage. The sand became a sheet of water, waveless and
+mirror-like, and in it we saw reflected in trenchant outline the
+mountain range beyond. "It must be water! it is water!" exclaimed an
+unbelieving director. And, lo! as he spoke the "dust devils" rose and
+danced along the face of the sea; in another minute the vision was
+gone; the dazzling sand, white, blank and dull, mocked our senses.
+This was near Stein's Pass, up which the train of nine carriages
+was climbing--"the heaviest train that has gone over yet," said the
+triumphant conductor. "But we thought we'd try it." Each waggon weighed
+30 tons. The Pass is three miles long, and we were working at a grade
+of 74 feet with a 19-inch cylinder engine.
+
+Between Pyramid Station and San Simon (_stant nomina umbrarum_--the
+names of mere shadows of stations) the western border of New Mexico
+is crossed, and we enter the great Territory of Arizona, which lies
+between the Rocky Mountains and the Sierra Nevada.
+
+It is bounded by New Mexico on the east, by Mexico on the south, by
+Utah and Nevada on the north and north-west, and by California in
+continuation of the western boundary. It is as large as New York,
+Pennsylvania, Maryland, New Jersey, and Delaware together. Whom it
+belonged to first, so far as occupation constitutes possession, I
+know not; but the Spaniards owned and neglected it for more than
+three centuries before the Americans possessed it. In 1848 and 1853
+the regions now forming Arizona, New Mexico, Colorado, Utah, and
+Nevada were ceded by the descendants of the Spanish conquerors to
+the conquering Anglo-American. It would need weeks of assiduous
+travel to explore the portion of Arizona where the most interesting
+ruins in America, the cities of the Zoltecs or the Aztecs--for the
+experts differ respecting their origin--are to be found. The weight
+of authority and of recent investigation leads one to believe that the
+Aztecs were not the builders of these ruined cities. Humboldt, indeed,
+believed that they were; but, as Mr. Hinton remarks, in his capital
+little handbook, which I recommend to prospectors, emigrants, tourists,
+and travellers, "to suppose such an utter abandonment of settled
+habitations, it will be necessary to suppose some strange impelling
+reasons, either in climate or other causes, that must have amounted
+to a catastrophe. An hypothesis which would leave a whole race able
+to conquer an empire, and to preserve power enough to abandon without
+destruction their old homes, implies conditions and forces without
+a known historical parallel." The conclusion that many native cities
+were flourishing when the Spaniards arrived in America may, perhaps, be
+questioned. There is a distinctive character about them, differing from
+that of the Mississippi mounds, the Central American pyramids, or the
+ruined cities of Yucatan.
+
+The site of one of these cities was pointed out to us from the
+train, and that was all we saw of them. But I heard so much about
+the mysterious remains that I was induced to procure Mr. Bancroft's
+remarkable essay on the native races of the Pacific Coast. Mr. Bancroft
+believes that the Pueblos and other Indians, in a state of civilisation
+which they subsequently lost, were the earliest inhabitants of these
+countries and the builders of the cities; that the Apaches came down
+upon them, and their work being then aided by the Spaniards, this
+original agricultural people were swept off the face of the earth.
+But where the Apaches came from the American ethnologists have not,
+I believe, determined. For hundreds of miles these ruins cover the
+country--stone houses, ancient watch-towers, and adobe buildings,
+around which are quantities of stone implements, masses of crockery and
+pottery. In some places there are structures of wood and stone, without
+iron, the masonry consisting of thin plates of sandstone dressed on the
+edges, and laid in coarse mortar nearly as hard as the stone itself.
+
+The explorers who have discovered the most interesting cities in
+Arizona and elsewhere were officers of the United States army. They
+have been the true pioneers of American civilisation in the West, and
+it is most creditable to them that they have been able to furnish so
+much scientific and antiquarian observation in the execution of their
+arduous and often painful duty in Indian warfare. There is no cold
+shade cast upon the labours of officers who desire to make a little
+reputation for themselves by contributions to scientific publications,
+and by papers on natural history and the like in periodical
+publications or in the daily press.
+
+There is, as might be expected from its position, a very high
+temperature in Arizona. This lasts from the middle of June to the first
+of October. During the best part of summer exertion of any kind is
+impossible. Metal objects cannot be handled without producing blisters;
+rain scarcely ever falls; and, to keep up the drain of constant
+evaporation, a man must drink a gallon or two gallons of water a day.
+Mr. Ross Brown, speaking of the summer, declares that "everything
+dries. Waggons dry; men dry; chickens dry. There is no juice left in
+anything, living or dead, by the close of summer. Officers and soldiers
+creak as they walk; chickens hatched at the season come out of the
+shell ready cooked. Bacon is eaten with a spoon, and butter must stand
+in the sun an hour before the flies become dry enough for use. The
+Indians sit in the river with fresh mud on their heads, and, by dint of
+constant dipping and sprinkling, manage to keep from roasting, though
+they usually come out parboiled." But, although it is recorded that a
+party encamped on a narrow canyon where the temperature was 120 degrees,
+there was no sunstroke. And in that respect the climate differs from
+that on the eastern coast, where, especially this very summer, a great
+number of deaths were caused by _coup de soleil_. People, with the
+thermometer marking 94 degrees, talk of its being agreeably cold. An
+exceedingly interesting fact, if it be one, connected with residence in
+this part of the world is the wholesome effect of complete abstinence.
+Death from want of water was by no means infrequent in the old days
+before so many wells were dug; but it only occurs when there is a good
+deal of humidity in the air. Although alcoholic drinks and tobacco have
+an injurious effect, there is a large consumption of both at all the
+stations and at the mines.
+
+As in the Orange River Free State, where probably the conditions of
+temperature are not very dissimilar, pulmonary complaints are cured, so
+a residence in Arizona, it is said, stops consumption; and there are
+authentic statements that people who arrived in a rapid decline have
+experienced almost immediate relief of the principal symptoms, and have
+been finally cured. Governor Safford, in an official letter, states
+that his lungs were a good deal diseased, and that he was suffering
+with a severe cough when he reached Arizona, and that in six months his
+cough left him. He is satisfied the warm, dry atmosphere acted like a
+healing balm to diseased lungs, and that, the pores being kept open,
+the impurities which attack weak organs escape through the skin. Dr.
+Loryea, of San Francisco, and Dr. Sawyer aver that Arizona is nature's
+Turkish bath, and that Yuma, that evil-looking place, contains the
+fountains of health.
+
+Of such vast regions a small acquaintance acquired by passing rapidly
+twice over a line of railway does not entitle one to speak; but, if
+what we read and heard of Arizona be true, there is within its limits
+enormous mineral and agricultural wealth. There are carboniferous
+basins of great extent and richness. The mountains teem with ore.
+Silver and gold, copper pyrites, zinc, and lead are to be found over
+a great range, the extent of which is as yet imperfectly known. There
+are sulphates of nearly all the metals; metallic oxides, chlorides,
+carbonates, nitrates; agates, amethysts, garnets, and other precious
+stones. People there are who believe that the diamond, the emerald, and
+the ruby will turn up in due time. In fact, if one were to be guided
+by the accounts in the papers or the guide-books, he would think that
+a sure way of making an immediate fortune would be to settle down on
+any hillside in this favourite land. Nevertheless, what I saw out of my
+window gave me reason to suppose that there was poverty in Arizona as
+well as in the old country. Nor did the buildings which I saw by the
+way at the sparse stations and infrequent towns give an idea that the
+in-dwellers were well-to-do in the world. The adobe, or burnt brick,
+which is a common material in lieu of better, has always a ruinous
+appearance. The houses built of it yesterday seem tumbling to pieces
+from the influences of old age.
+
+We take no note of time save by its relation to constant motion, and
+to the "programme"--a Procrustean bed on which we have voluntarily
+placed our tortured limbs. Sometimes in the hours of the night, which
+could not be called still because of the incessant pealing, rattling,
+and thundering of the train, I thought of the wonderful ways of man
+with himself in such affairs as we were now engaged in. There is a play
+of Terence which was a trouble to me in my youth, so long ago that I
+remember very little more of it than the dismal and elongated name;
+but Mr. "Heautontimorumenos" never needlessly bound himself up in a
+programme and delivered his life over to a time-table! It is likely
+enough, seeing what sort of man he was, that he would have adopted
+that course had he lived in these days. I admit that programmes are
+necessary when your movements regulate, or have to be regulated by,
+those of other people; and that was the case in some measure with
+us, but the solicitude it occasioned the worthy and valued friends,
+whose brows I perceived becoming more puckered, and whose faces and
+spirits were heavy with cares connected with the programme, to come up
+to time, was beyond belief, and I vowed if ever I had my own way with
+the ordering of a party I would have no programme at all. And plot and
+calculate as you will, a gale of wind, or a heated axle, or a broken
+bridge, or a flood, upsets everything, and your schemes gang aglee
+utterly! It was admirable to see how we were working out the destiny
+we had made manifest for ourselves in advance so long ago, but the task
+was not easy. What curious sounds, by the way, our train made at night!
+One could now and then compose words to the tune of the wheels, and
+the regular rhythm forced one at times to hum the words of a song, of
+which the train seemed to hammer out the music. It seemed so strange to
+be turning into bed night after night, and waking up to pass the same
+life day after day, like a log of wood carried on by an interminable,
+irresistible torrent.
+
+Provided with books and newspapers, and friends to converse with, as
+well as with sights to see, we had, however, no reason to complain
+that time hung heavy on our hands as the train sped on. The books
+were very utilitarian, it is true--Reports of Chambers of Commerce,
+statistics and papers connected with railway and commercial enterprise
+and the like. But our directors took to that literature with avidity,
+and aided by maps and tables, copiously furnished to them, seemed
+bent on passing with honours in a competitive examination anent the
+American railway system. There were always, close at hand in the cars,
+competent authorities to answer questions, or able champions to engage
+in controversy, and as I heard all the subtle contentions, which I did
+not understand, concerning signalling and baggage checking, gauges and
+engines, curves and gradients, freights and fares, I was set to think
+what the field had been in which all the ingenuity and talent displayed
+in dealing with such topics were exercised in pre-railway days. These
+discussions were mostly connected with the consideration of profits
+and percentages, and that was a neutral ground on which the combatants
+manoeuvred their facts and figures as in a natural "_schauplatz_".
+There were times when such investigations ran down like a clock,
+and no one wound them up again for a few hours, and then my friends
+digested the remains they found on the field of battle and strengthened
+themselves for friendly jousting.
+
+Not very long ago there would have been exceedingly good sporting in
+many parts of Arizona. Grizzly bears, common and black bears; pumas,
+mountain sheep, jaguars, ocelots, opossums, panthers, wolves, and
+lynxes are largely distributed over the hill ranges. There are also
+hares and rabbits and many smaller animals. Wild turkeys have much
+diminished of late years; but there is a variety of birds, some of
+them excellent for the spit. The chase, however, is attended with some
+danger, unless one is very well booted and looks out where he treads,
+as rattle-snakes abound, and are of exceeding virulence, the black
+species being especially deadly. There are horned toads, but these are
+harmless.
+
+For the botanist Arizona is an almost inexhaustible field of
+delight. Any one who likes to read of vegetable wonders, or of an
+extraordinarily varied flora, cannot do better than get Dr. Loryea's
+work, or read 'New Mexico,' by Elias Brevoort. The growth which struck
+us most was that of the extraordinary cactus called the candelabra
+or Sahuaro. It is worth while going so far as the railway will take
+one to see these plants sticking up on the sides of a rock without a
+trace of verdure or moisture, rising to the height of 40 or 50 feet,
+and throwing out enormous arms at the most grotesque angles, each
+varying from the other in shape, the number of its arms, and in the
+manner in which they are disposed. This giant cactus is covered with
+prickles, and is of a light green colour. It is said that in the old
+days the Apache Indians not unfrequently made use of them as handy
+means of torture, and nailed their victims to a cactus previous to
+setting fire to it. The body of the plant is resinous, and it can
+be easily converted into a bonfire. Here and there we saw some with
+traces of pale yellow flowers. When these are gone there is a fruit,
+which makes an excellent preserve, or can be boiled into sugar. Then
+there are prickly pears in great quantities; and there is a "negro-head
+cactus," with a round top covered with sharp spines, which furnished
+the Mexicans with fish-hooks. "There is a soul of beauty in things
+evil." If a thirsty traveller coming upon one of these plants kindles
+a fire around it, the juices of its body are gradually concentrated
+into a central cavity, where they only wait incision to be liberated
+in the form of a pleasant drink, half a gallon or more in quantity.
+The appliances for getting a drink out of most of these roots are
+described at length in various books of travel; but however useful they
+may have been at the time, the activity of the Atchison, Topeka and
+Santa Fe Railway will in all probability exempt travellers in future
+from any necessity to avail themselves of these ingenious devices.
+Trees flourish in spite of the heat and want of water. As various as
+the trees are the human inhabitants, and one of the greatest marvels
+connected with them, perhaps, is the extraordinary variety of dialects
+amongst people of the same race, who lived in the same country long
+before the white man came to trouble them. They are decreasing, of
+course, in numbers; but in some of the reservations they seem to
+have arrested downward progress, and to have taken to some form of
+agricultural labour. At present Arizona is the happy hunting-ground
+of the unfortunate red man. There is, I am assured, no disposition on
+the part of the whites to intrude upon the reservations of the various
+tribes. I did not hear of any one who had come in from the East to
+settle with the view of making his fortune by farming; but miners have
+flooded the canyons, and climbed the mountain-tops; and now they have
+settled down into a steady way of life without any big "booms," as the
+Americans say, but with prospects of pretty certain returns for their
+labour.
+
+All night we travelled on, and when the morning came, we were still
+traversing the desert, still passing through one of the most sterile
+wastes on the face of the earth, where, however, by strange contrasts
+of nature--or is it strange?--there were in the mountains and in the
+ravines rich ores to tempt the cupidity and enterprize of man. We are
+continually reminded of similar wastes in India and in Africa; but no
+one, as far as I know, has yet discovered any mineral wealth in the
+north-western deserts of our Indian Empire. And although Captain Burton
+and others have fancied they have come across an El Dorado in Southern
+Egypt, and Ibrahim Pasha had such faith in the existence of gold in
+those regions that he led forth an expedition to perish there, there
+is no such fortune in store for the adventurous miner as awaits him in
+Arizona, Colorado, and California.
+
+_June 1st._--Everyone who has entered Arizona, or left it--and let us
+hope he went back all the better for his visit--will recollect Yuma for
+ever.
+
+Yuma is on the Colorado, which divides California from Arizona.
+The muddy waters of the river rush with immense velocity past the
+buttresses of the fine bridge, with a draw for steamers, that spans
+it. The town consists apparently of adobe houses, and these not very
+regularly built. I could not visit the main street for lack of time,
+but the offshoots within eyeshot of us were not tempting. All we
+could see from the railway windows were flat-roofed adobe houses, some
+squalid Indians nearly naked, the buildings, with the Stars and Stripes
+over them, of the United States post on the left bank, and a few wooden
+sheds. It is said to be one of the hottest places in the world, and
+certainly looked dry and dusty. They say that a soldier who died there
+and went to an unmentionable place, returned in the spirit to beg for
+a blanket, as he felt so cold!
+
+More happily constituted travellers than most of us have seen something
+pleasing in the aspect of the country roundabout, and have been moved
+to much admiration by the various tints of the hills in the distance,
+and by the rocks which constitute the near limits of the valley through
+which the river passes. In the old days, when the stage-coaches offered
+the only means of travelling through the district, there might have
+been a good deal to see along the road; but the rail generally avoids
+sights, and where nature is at its best, the engineer strikes deep down
+and burrows if he can. The colours of the hills are bright and varied;
+the lava rocks are of many shades, and the sun, piercing through strata
+of pure air, illuminates them with great vividness and force; but after
+a time the eye tires of the uniform hues of the landscape. For a few
+miles the rail runs close to the river, then plunges into the most
+remorseless, cruel waste of sand and rock, spread out up to the foot of
+the rugged hills of the Barnardino Range, I ever beheld--an abomination
+of desolation compared with which the Libyan Desert or the plains of
+Scinde were the Garden of the Hesperides. I cannot describe, nor could
+I at any time hope to succeed in giving an adequate conception of this
+dreadful wilderness. For 107 miles west there is not a drop of water to
+be found; the stations are dependent on the railway for their supplies.
+But Nature, as if to take away the reproach of permitting such a vast
+blotch on her fair face, kindly threw in Fata Morgana. We saw with
+delight widespread lakes with fairy islands in the midst; placid seas
+washing the base of the distant hills. This baked and dreary expanse
+extends nearly to San Gorgonio. We were spared the sandstorms which are
+so dreadful, nor did we experience inconvenience from the dust. The
+traveller, who has begun to despair of ever seeing anything greener
+than giant cacti and the adamantine vegetation which dispenses with
+water, is agreeably surprised as he approaches Los Angeles. If he
+be as fortunate as we were in having such friends as Colonel Baker
+and his wife to take charge of him, he will be amply repaid for far
+greater discomforts than any he experienced in the Colorado desert.
+From Los Angeles there is a railway to Santa Monica, seventeen miles
+distant, which belongs to Colonel Baker; and I would advise every one
+who can, either to spare or make the time for a diversion to that
+most delightful spot. Judge of the pleasure we felt when, after a
+picturesque run through orange groves, vineyards, and fields of corn
+and barley, we gazed on the waters of the Pacific--"[Greek: thalatta!
+thalatta!]" What a glorious scene! the broad bay lighted by the rays
+of the declining sun; the blue waves rolling on in solemn march,
+and breaking in long lines of foam on the dazzling sand, and nearer
+still the gardens and trees of the Pacific Biarritz which was about
+to welcome us! Our palace-car and its attendant carriages shot into a
+siding close to the beach. In a few minutes "every man Jack" was off to
+the bathing establishment to conform to the regulations ere we plunged
+into the sea. It is an orthodox bathing-place of the highest order. The
+Baths are extensive, and provided with every convenience and comfort
+for ladies and invalids; hot and cold, salt water and fresh, for those
+who do not like to trust themselves to the sea. A rope extended seaward
+to hold on by was needful, for the surf was heavy and the undertow
+strong. The water was delicious. Generally there is less sea on, and it
+is never too hot or too cold for bathing. Next morning we had another
+bath in a still rougher Pacific. The Duke and some of the party were
+driven about the country by Colonel and Mrs. Baker, and at 3 P.M., to
+our sorrow, we left the most lovable little spot of all we have seen
+on this continent. Good fortune be in store for Santa Monica! At Los
+Angeles, where carriages were waiting, we drove through the streets and
+suburbs, which enabled us to appreciate the reasons which induced the
+Spanish founders to give the city its name. In the evening we continued
+our journey, passing in the dark over the feat of engineering called
+the Loop.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+THE YOSEMITE VALLEY.
+
+ A new Land of Goshen--A Jehu indeed--The Drive to Clarke's--A
+ Mountain Hostelry--Grizzlies--Fascination Point--The
+ Merced--Yosemite Fall--A Salute--Mountain Airs--The Mirror
+ Lake--"See that Rattle?"--A Philosophic Barber.
+
+
+_June 2nd._--It is astonishing how soon one gets accustomed to the
+rattle and rumble of the rail, and sleeps all the night through after
+a time, waking up only when a train stops at a station, just as a
+miller is roused by the cessation of the clock of the mill-wheel. We
+keep good hours, and so at 4.30 this morning I was looking out of the
+window at a sea of blue mountain ridges upon the west, which looked
+like the waves of the ocean, so varied in the serrated edges was the
+line of stony waves which seemed as if they were about to sweep down
+over the great stretch of prairie. We were passing through a new land
+of Goshen, at least that was the name which I detected on the station
+board, indicating a junction with another line, and early as was the
+hour the door of the hospitable restaurant was open, and gentlemen
+in front were to be seen drawing their hands across their lips as if
+they had been taking a refresher in the early morning. Close at hand
+the country was perfectly flat, covered with glorious crops nearly
+ripe for the sickle, and indeed cut and stacked in some places. Water
+appeared abundant; a river flowing west was visible at intervals, its
+course marked by a line of trees. Large black cranes stalked about in
+the meadow-like fields, and hares sat up on end to take a look at the
+train. The paucity of human beings, except at the rare stations, was
+remarkable; only when I say "rare," perhaps I am scarcely justified,
+as there were little wooden huts at intervals perhaps of ten or twelve
+miles, where a saloon announced itself, and a possible ticket-office.
+
+On the east of the plain through which the line runs, the peaks of
+the Sierra Nevada were visible, but the journey was rather monotonous
+all the same, and we were glad when our train halted at Madera, about
+ninety miles from Goshen, where we were to get out and start on our
+expedition to the Yosemite Valley. Especial arrangements had been
+made for our conveyance, but I almost doubt now whether it would not
+have been better for us to have taken the ordinary carriage which
+leaves Madera every day, except Monday, for the Yosemite Valley, at
+7.45, arriving at Clarke's or Bruce's in somewhat less than twelve
+hours, so as to bring daylight with it to the halting-place; a very
+desirable thing, as we soon found out. It was 8 o'clock before our
+party started from Madera, in two Kendal carriages with four horses
+each. In one was the Duke, Lady Green, Mr. Stephen, and myself, with
+Crockett on the box; in another were Sir Henry Green, Mr. Wright, Major
+Anderson, and Mr. Jerome. Our driver was a man with the impossible
+name of MacLenathan, a resolute, dry, taciturn man, with a good face,
+seamed with the exposure to sun and rain of many years on the box.
+But he told us he had deserted it lately, and had taken to the work
+of livery stable keeper, only coming out on this occasion as driver to
+do honour to the Duke. As it turned out, it was well his right and his
+left hand had not lost their cunning. The driver of the other carriage
+was a noted character, rejoicing in the name of "Buffalo Bill," and
+later on we had reason to feel very thankful to him also for the
+possession of great pluck and nerve. For some ten or twelve miles the
+route, which consists of mere wheel tracks over the prairie, runs over
+moderately undulating land. On the right there is a shoot or _flume_
+for carrying down timber from the upper part of the mountain ridge
+fifty miles away. The dust was troublesome, and the rapid motion of
+the four horses scarcely saved us from the roasting sun. The scenery
+was not interesting; indeed, the great object of attraction was the
+little Californian quail with his pretty crest, running across through
+the grass or jumping up upon a stump to have a look at the travellers.
+Stage stables were far apart, but the speed was fair, and it was
+astonishing to see the excellent condition in which the horses were
+at the end of their long canter, and what capital steeds were taken
+out of the stalls, in which they were feeding on barley-straw, to
+be put into the traces. I think the average length of the stages was
+about twelve miles. We lost about an hour at a little mining village
+where we halted for dinner, a place called Coarse Gold, as well as
+I recollect, consisting of the usual buildings, a few shanties, the
+store, the hotel, far better than might have been expected, and a sort
+of wigwam or one-storeyed house, in front of which were assembled a
+number of "Digger Indians," degraded specimens of a degraded tribe.
+They sat looking at the new arrivals in the most apathetic manner,
+just as they might regard so many flies. The men were dressed in a
+compromise of old Indian attire, leather leggings and deerskin jackets,
+with European clothing, caps, bad hats and trousers, and old boots,
+the women swathed ungracefully in what seemed to be pieces of blanket,
+their legs encased in folds of dirty cotton. One of these Diggers was
+very slightly dressed, and as it is intensely cold in the winter, we
+asked him whether he did not feel the effect of the frost and snow.
+He knew a little English, and made the most of it. "When your body is
+covered you do not feel the cold," he said; "But your face is always
+uncovered, and yet you do not feel the cold there. An Indian's body is
+all face." And that was all the explanation he would vouchsafe to us.
+Somehow or another, what with delays at the stations, possibly caused
+by our being out of the regular running, and being an interpolation on
+the ordinary course of travel, and possibly owing to our reduced speed,
+for the carriages with four horses did not, it seems, go as fast as
+the public conveyance with six, it was getting dark as we approached
+the line of wooded hills, in a valley in which, many miles away, lay
+our halting-place for the night. The result of our delay in starting,
+concerning which the driver had been severe from time to time, was
+startlingly manifest as the coaches mounted the steep ascents of one of
+the most tortuous roads in the world. The spurs of the hills come down
+very sharply to the valley, and the road is carried round by a series
+of very severe gradients following the contour of the mountain-chain,
+so that at one time there is a deep gorge on your left, and then, as
+the road leaves that spur with the valley on that side and crosses to
+another spur, there is a great descent on the right, so that you are
+continually passing along by a series of precipices, to which, in our
+case, the fast gathering gloom imparted additional horror. Through the
+sighing of the wind in the trees aloft came the roar of the torrents
+down below. The drivers went along at a good steady canter, and from
+time to time, as we came round a sharp curve, I dare say the thought
+was in every one's mind, what would happen if one of the leaders
+fell, or if the driver slipped his hand in gathering up the reins to
+go round the corner. The scenery became more wild and formidable, so
+to speak, at every fresh turn. The colossal trees, which challenged
+admiration in the daytime, closed up in greater volume, darkening the
+narrow road completely, so that in an hour after entering upon the
+mountain-range it became as black as pitch. The lamps of Buffalo Bill
+in the leading carriage were some guide to our driver. He had none,
+and it was with anxiety, renewed every ten minutes or so, that we saw
+the lights in front describe a graceful curve, which showed that they
+were passing by one of the dips or cuts of the road. It needed skill
+and judgment for MacLenathan to conduct the carriage, because if he
+drove too close to that in front of us, the clouds of dust obscured
+the view, and if he dropped too far behind he lost the benefit of the
+lights. By enormous trunks of trees, by piles of timber, through deep
+cuttings in the rock, plashing over watercourses, descending swiftly
+into river-beds, and splashing through the fords over boulders, then
+climbing up steep hillsides, on and on, it seemed as though the night
+would never come to an end, and we inwardly, and audibly too, expressed
+our regret that we had not started a little earlier; but still there
+was an almost pleasurable excitement in holding on as we swept round
+one of these terrible gorges, and tried to look down into the gulf
+beneath. That last stage seemed interminable, but towards 9 o'clock at
+night the driver of the coach in front announced that we were getting
+"near at last"; and lucky it was, for his lights were giving out. "It
+is just as well that they did not," said our driver, "because it would
+be bad for you." "Why?" "Well," he said, "you would just have to get
+out and walk! I would not undertake to drive any one in the dark along
+such a road as this." Presently we heard the noise of rushing water,
+and gained the bank of a stream flowing with swiftness over a shingle
+bed. This we crossed, and in half an hour more, through the dark belt
+of trees in front, lights were discerned, and, crossing another stream
+and a bridge, our wearied horses were pulled up in front of the hotel,
+a large wooden building, on the steps of which were the landlord and
+his staff, and most of the inmates turned out to greet and inspect
+the travellers who had been long expected. "It is a bad country to go
+driving about in the dark," said Mr. Bruce, the landlord, a sentiment
+in which we thoroughly agreed. There was a supper in the common
+room, to which, albeit the fare was primitive enough, we did ample
+justice. Travellers have complained of the charges along the road, but,
+considering the distance which all articles have to be carried to the
+Valley, the heavy duties, and the shortness of the season, I do not
+think that any one with experience of Swiss inns would complain much;
+and if the traveller desires to drink claret, he must not be astonished
+if he pays eight or nine shillings a bottle for it. The ordinary fare,
+at hotel prices, is quite good enough for hungry people, and eggs,
+milk, and bread are abundant, and not dear. The bedrooms, sufficiently
+simple in all their appointments, are good enough to be welcome to
+tired people, for there is a fair bed to lie upon, and the sheets, as
+far as our experience went, were clean and fresh. Nor were the insect
+horrors, of which we may have some knowledge in parts of Europe, to be
+dreaded, not even mosquitoes at this time of year.
+
+Soon after dawn a thunderstorm broke over the valley, hail and torrents
+of rain, and the landlord congratulated us upon the cooling effect
+it would have on the air, and on the absence of dust, which is rather
+troublesome at times. It was necessary to make an early start in the
+morning, for it is a long journey to the Yosemite. For some years past
+the Valley has become a kind of American Chamouni, and if Americans
+swarm over Europe in search of the sublime and beautiful, they cannot
+be accused of neglecting altogether their own country. The first thing
+I saw, on walking out on the verandah of the hotel, was the stage-coach
+and six horses, with eight ladies and nine gentlemen, loading up for
+the Valley. They had arrived late the night before, a little in advance
+of us, and yet the ladies, bravely attired for the road, were all in
+their place in the _char a bancs_ long before 7. Travellers frequently
+stay at Bruce's, and our host promises good sport to any one who will
+make it his headquarters; but I cannot speak with any confidence on
+that point myself; still I should think it a very pleasant quarter for
+a man who had nothing else to do, and who had an aptitude for climbing,
+to go about looking out big game. We heard talk of pheasants, but
+saw none: the bird which is called by that name not being entitled
+to it, according to ornithologists. In front of the hotel was laid
+out the skin of a cinnamon bear, which had been shot by an Austrian
+gentleman--"Count Fritz Thumb," the landlord called him--a few days
+previously, and which was to be sent after him as a trophy of his
+skill. "But," says Boniface, "it was not he shot him at all; it was 'is
+old Injun hunter." Grizzlies, he said, were rare, but they were to be
+found if you went up high enough, and as he spoke he pointed up to the
+mountains towering away in the distance in grand Alpine proportions.
+Deer were common enough, and there were some tame specimens of the
+ordinary black deer running about in the enclosure. We had an early
+start, but not quite so early as the Americans; and it was wonderful
+how well our four hardy horses did the first stage, six and twenty
+miles, including some very sharp ascents from the Hotel.
+
+From time to time we got out and walked up the sharp bits, diverging
+to the right or left to gather the lovely flowers which grew on
+the roadside, or halting to admire the giant trees which clothed
+the mountain ridges. Pitiable ignorance! not to know the names of
+the plants or shrubs or wonderful bunches of blossoms, among which
+fluttered the most magnificently coloured butterflies. Woodpeckers
+of many different species uttered their quaint notes in jerky flight
+from tree to tree, or peered at the travellers from the shelter of
+the branches. Firs, pines, and spruces of enormous size, and trees
+to me unknown, formed a dense forest on each side of the road; but
+now and then we caught glimpses of the stupendous ranges of the alps
+beyond. It was lamentable to see the waste and wreck wrought in this
+wondrous wealth of timber--reckless, wicked waste. Charred trunks
+stood with leafless arms withered and black, or lay prone among the
+ferns in myriads. This was, we were told, the work of shepherds, who
+think nothing of setting fire to one of the finest trees in the world
+to warm themselves for an hour, and are delighted with a conflagration
+which may lay a hillside in ashes. And the Indians too are held to
+have their share in the destruction. There was enough of timber wasted
+and destroyed mile after mile to build a city. The nemesis must come;
+already the alarm has been sounded, and the State authorities here and
+elsewhere are trying to prevent the mischief. I have often had occasion
+to regret my ignorance of botany _inter alia_; but never did I feel it
+more than when I was walking up the road, on each side of which was a
+carpet of flowers, a maze of shrubs and plants--dense brushwood--to not
+one of which could I give a name. We arrived at the Halfway House at
+12.35 as much pleased as the horses which brought us there so well at
+the respite, for it was an awful "pull up," and the coachman did his
+work at high pressure. In the course of our pilgrimage we had found a
+very pleasant _divertissement_. The Major, Mr. White, and Mr. Jerome
+had excellent voices, and from time to time they burst into song,
+giving with great effect the quaint negro melodies, which are now made
+familiar to us in London, from a very large _repertoire_; and so the
+afternoon passed in quiet enjoyment as we climbed the hills on foot or
+in the carriages--snatches of talk, exclamations of wonder and delight,
+and outbursts of the 'Golden Slipper,' 'O! that 'Possum,' 'The Ark,'
+'John Brown,' 'Tramp, Tramp,' and other choruses.
+
+It was near 4 o'clock when the driver, who had been silent for some
+time, looking round at us occasionally as one who would say, "Wait a
+little till I surprise you," suddenly pulling up, said, "Now, here you
+are. This is Fascination Point! Won't you get down a bit?" And, lo!
+there indeed lay before us a scene of indescribable grandeur. I know
+nothing like the effect produced by Yosemite Valley when seen for the
+first time from this point. It has a characteristic which no other
+similar view I am acquainted with possesses. You take in at one glance
+stupendous mountain-ranges, all but perpendicular, beyond which you see
+the snowy crests of the great Sierra, the profound valley between them,
+a long vista of extraordinary magnificence, of cascades and precipitous
+waterfalls, and far down below a silvery river rushing through a
+forest composed of the noblest trees in the world, with patches of
+emerald-green sward and bright meadows.
+
+I see that by a slip of the pen I have miscalled the place from which
+we got our first view of the wondrous scene. But I have a right to
+change the name for my own use. What the driver said was "Inspiration
+Point." I prefer my mistake, for the view inspires you with no feeling
+save that of wonder and delight. These sublime scenes appear to be
+beyond the reach of poetry. Niagara and the Yosemite have not yet
+found a laureate. The peculiar and unique feature of the valley seems
+to me to be the height and boldness of the cliffs which spring out
+from the mountain-sides like sentinels to watch and ward over the
+secrets of the gorge; next to that is the number and height of the
+waterfalls; but it is only by degrees and by comparison that the mind
+takes in the fact that the cliffs are not hundreds, but thousands
+of feet high--that these bright, flashing, fleecy cataracts fall for
+thousands of feet--that the rent which has been torn in the heart of
+the mountains, till it is closed by the awful granite portals beyond
+which no mortal may pass, extends for miles. I thought as I gazed
+that it were pity to descend, lest a nearer view might destroy the
+effect of that _coup d'oeil_; but the driver had regulated the period
+for rapture. He whipped us up to our places by word of mouth, and
+the carriages renewed their course, now striking by bold zigzags down
+into the valley for our destination, which was still six miles away. I
+shall not attempt to describe my own feelings, far less can I pretend
+to tell what others, probably far more susceptible of the beauty and
+grandeur of what we beheld than I am, may have felt at the succession
+of the awe-inspiring revelations of the tremendous grandeur of the
+Valley which came upon us. What is the use of rolling off a catalogue
+of names and figures?--even the brush of the painter, charged with
+the truest colours and guided by the finest hand and eye, could never
+do justice--that is, could never give a just idea of these cliffs and
+waterfalls. "El Capitan! Oh, that's the name, is it? Three thousand
+three hundred feet high!" And then you try to take in what that means.
+"And it's 3500 feet down to the Valley? Dear me!" "And that is the
+Cathedral Rock? And those two peaks are the Spires? I don't exactly see
+the resemblance; do you?"
+
+There was a sort of wail of delight from us all as we came on the
+"Bridal Veil Fall"; and I do not think any one cared to know that it
+was just 60 short of 1000 feet high! Surely one of the most graceful,
+lovely _chutes d'eau_ on earth, lost though it be from view behind the
+rocks at the close of its feathery flight! But there was no stopping to
+look at anything; relentless Fate drove us down and on, till the wheels
+rolled more evenly, and at last we came to the bed of the valley--some
+1800 yards broad, opening out here and there yet wider--and we
+rejoiced in the sight of the bright clear water of the Merced, child
+of innumerable icy mothers, flashing, sparkling, dashing and brawling,
+like a myriad Lodores, between her banks decked with flowers and
+covered with forest trees.
+
+Suddenly there dashed out of a glade two cavaliers, and made full tilt
+at the leading carriage. "To arms!" Not a bit of it! Nor banditti
+or Injuns--of whom we had met one or two riding sullenly along to
+the hunting-grounds--no, only two hotel touts armed with cards of
+self-commendation, and not apparently in much rivalry, for when told
+that we had engaged our hotel, they galloped off to waylay other
+travellers, of whose coming they were apprized by our driver. Our
+hotel, I may say by the way, gave us full contentment. The site was
+admirable, commanding a full and near view of _the_ Fall of Falls--the
+Yosemite--which had so fascinated our eyes that we could scarce divert
+them to any other object--not "Widow's Tears," or "Virgin's Tears,"
+nor the "Three Brothers," not anything but the Yosemite! And so, when
+our rooms were pointed out, we made off to the spot where the fine
+cloudlike vapour rising above the tree-tops indicated the basin into
+which the waters sought rest after their troubled leap.
+
+Our way lay through the usual gathering of stores, hotels, livery
+stables for the horses and ponies needed for the excursions, and
+curiosity dealers' shops, to the village street, as it may be termed,
+shadowed by fine trees, under which reposed some Indians--one of whom,
+an Amazon in yellow toga, went riding full gallop past us, her hair
+falling in a black mat on her shoulders, sitting low, in Melton style,
+regardless of poultry, children, and boulders, and vanishing in a cloud
+of dust under the trees. Then we turned to the left and crossed the
+river by a rustic bridge; and as I looked down into the dancing waters
+certain shadow-like objects flew up against the current. "Trout?"
+asked I. "Yes, they're trout. They take 'em--when they dew--five
+pounds weight. The Injuns catch 'em. We don't understand it as well."
+A short walk, with eyes ever up-turned, and we come out to a moraine,
+and, clambering up over a mass of trunks of trees and decaying timber,
+_the_ Falls were before us--I cannot write more--no adjective will do.
+"Two thousand six hundred and thirty-four feet, mind!" says the voice.
+"I don't care," thought we, "it's the most beautiful and wonderful
+water-jump ever seen by human eye." "It only remains," as they say, to
+state that there is first, falling over a sheet of granite straight as
+a wall, a considerable river, which in the plunge comes down at once
+1600 feet. There, in a basin of rock, it collects its scattered forces,
+under cover of eternal spray and cloud, and then takes another header
+of 434 feet to a barrier of granite, against which it rages for a mad
+moment, till it swells over and escapes from control by another spring
+of 600 feet sheer down--and now it is free, and rushes past at our
+feet, a joyous flashing stream.
+
+We returned through the meadows from the Falls, and as I was walking
+in advance of the party a snake wriggled across the path, which I
+struck at instinctively with my stick, and was lucky enough to kill
+at the first blow. I exhibited the carcass, or whatever a snake's
+dead body may be, in triumph to my companions. Further on our way we
+fell in with an old Frenchman who was carrying a basket of fruit from
+his little garden to the inn. With all the courtesy of his country,
+he offered to Lady Green the choicest in his little _corbeille_. He
+came from Lorraine very long ago to prospect in the States, almost the
+earliest of the pioneers, but he was still strong and active, and he
+pointed with great satisfaction up to a white flag planted on a dizzy
+height above, which he said he had placed with his own hands. The chief
+livery stable keeper is a German named Stegman. The first ascent of the
+Dome was made by a young Scotchman named Anderson, from Montrose; so
+with Indians, Americans, Mexicans, Europeans, there is a very liberal
+representation of the nations of the world, in the season, in the
+valley. Mr. Hutchinson, the Conservator of the Valley--one with all
+the enthusiasm of the American character in everything pertaining to
+the country, aggravated in this instance by an intense admiration for
+the valley over which he is appointed to watch--joined us at dinner in
+the little inn. Full of information, bubbling over with anecdote and
+illustration, and replete with all kinds of knowledge concentrated upon
+the one object--the Valley--the Valley--and nothing but the Valley.
+He knows its history since the time it was first discovered, and its
+natural history and geological formation, and all about the Indians who
+lived there and their traditions. It so happened that the Commissioners
+of the State of California, who are bound to visit the public
+domains, were also at the hotel, and so we had quite an unofficial and
+ceremonious meeting; and presently, as we stood in front of the hotel
+gazing up on the peaks, lighted up by the stars, and listening to the
+thunder of the waterfall, a startling report burst out on the night,
+and in another instant the echoes repeated from rock to rock were
+crashing through the Valley with the roar of heaven's artillery. It
+was the first gun of a salute ordered by the Commissioners to be fired
+in honour of the Duke's arrival. The effect was very fine, but I doubt
+whether I did not feel full of resentment at the outburst, very much as
+the owls and night-hawks might have been expected to feel, if one could
+judge from their cries. However, even a salute and echoes must come to
+an end, and as we were to get up early to start for the Mirror Lake, we
+turned in to bed at an early hour; not, however, to sleep, because the
+indefatigable and numerous company in the public room, off which were
+our bedrooms, were in high spirits, and the song and the dance, to the
+accompaniment of an invalid piano, for some time asserted their sway.
+
+Mr. Hutchinson had the Duke out early, because it is one of the
+obligations to see the sun rise, reflected in the Mirror Lake--if
+you can. There is no fear of cloud or rain. In the Mirror Lake is
+reflected--or was as we saw it--the precipice at the other side of the
+Valley, the bulk of Mount Watkins (so called from a photographer who
+has been daring and successful in his renderings of the Yosemite), and
+all the surrounding scenery. Once a friend and I saw a cow on its back
+in the air, by the shore of a Highland lake. The surface was smooth as
+that of the Mirror before us now. It was flapping its tail from side to
+side, and its forelegs were up in the sky. We could not make it out at
+first. There was, in fact, a cow standing near the water of the loch;
+and what we saw was a reflection of the animal, actually stronger and
+better defined than the object itself. So it was with the reflections
+in the Mirror Lake; but when the sun rose over the cliff and we looked
+at the water, the glare was too dazzling. "It was," as Mr. Wright
+remarked, "like the electric light." There were curious optical effects
+produced, some being troubled with purple, others with green or yellow
+in their eyes, after a vain attempt to look at the reflection, but that
+did not last long.
+
+We returned to breakfast to make an early start for Union and Glacier
+Points on ponies. Among the company at the hotel, introduced by Mr.
+Hutchinson, there was a young lady who was well acquainted with the
+Valley, and who proved to be a very agreeable companion in our mountain
+ride; but it was not long ere she was candid enough to let it be known
+that she did not visit the Yosemite out of love of the picturesque and
+beautiful, but that she was interested in the sale of photographs of
+the Valley, and was, in fact, a very persuasive and efficient agent of
+a firm in San Francisco, who had thus established an outlying picket of
+great activity and vigilance; and I am sure we all hope she may always
+be as successful with the visitors as she was with us. Of what we saw
+from the Glacier Point I must leave others to write or speak. It is
+reached by a zigzag on the mountain-side--a peculium of the maker, and
+all the "trails," as they are called, in the valley are the property
+of individuals or firms who are paid by tariff, and we heard "Eleven
+gone up before--Duke Sutherland, Lady Green, Sir Green, Mr. Wright, Mr.
+Russell, Mr. Jerome coming! Sixteen coming up behind!" On the plateau
+behind the cliffs, from which you look down on the Valley and at the
+snowfields on the mountain ranges opposite, there is a log house and
+shanty, and there we had a mountain meal ere we began the descent.
+
+Nothing in the way of riding is more disagreeable than going down
+a very sharp mountain-side on a pony not, for all you know, very
+sure-footed, and so instead of riding, I resolved to walk, now and
+then taking a short cut, to the great discomfiture of feet and boots,
+although it is three thousand feet to the bottom, and make the best
+of my way and the most of the road, which is very fair, down the zig
+zags. I reached the plain thoroughly hot and tired, and bathed in
+perspiration, in fifty-seven minutes. The horsekeeper, who came down
+with the rest of the party, seemed to have been affected by the rarity
+of the atmosphere or something else up at the mountain hostelry, for
+he insisted on it that I had ridden down, and demanded his horse.
+"What the thunder, Russell, have you done with my horse?" he asked
+again and again. Satisfied for the time by my assurances that I had
+not ridden at all, he went off, and then, thinking over the matter,
+came back again to repeat his question, till I told him I would not
+answer it any more. He was an amusing fellow in his way, and affable.
+He called the Duke "Sutherland," now and then putting Mr. before it.
+As he was watering his horses, he said: "Here, Mister Sutherland, lay
+hold of the bucket, will you, whilst I take a turn at this one." And
+the Duke did so with alacrity. It was a day of incessant activity. No
+sooner had the mountain party come down than they were off again to
+drive through the Valley. The rest of our party had already executed
+masterly investigations at the foot of all the waterfalls; admired
+the Bridal Veil and the Widow's Tear, as one cascade is satirically
+termed, "because," says the guide, "it dries up in six months;" had
+driven and ridden everywhere and seen everything, and we had to do the
+same; but it would need a week of conscientious work to exploit the
+Valley thoroughly. At half-past 7, the dinner hour, the little inn was
+swarming with people; the stage had arrived with fresh contingents.
+Every place was full, and what with the clatter of knives and forks,
+the clamour of waiters, the tumult of voices laughing and talking,
+it was scarcely possible to conceive that a few short years ago this
+valley was in the exclusive possession of the Indian and the wild
+beast. There is now, however, a great conflict of interests, and Mammon
+is holding his revels in the Valley. The State has voted a certain
+sum of money, twenty-five thousand dollars, I think, to buy up the
+interests of the trail-makers; that is, those who struck out and made
+paths to the various objects of attraction; but no success has yet been
+attained in the negotiations, and, indeed, I should think it a very
+bad investment for most of them to accept their share of such a sum.
+Macaulay, for example, who made the path up to the point from which
+we descended to-day, must make many hundreds of dollars in the height
+of the season, as he charges so much a visitor, and, besides, has a
+restaurant where they take their meals at the top.
+
+Next day (June 5th) we left the Yosemite with the satisfactory
+assurance that we had made the most of our time, though we could not
+believe we had done it justice. There were some small "nuages" on the
+face of our "Mirror Lake," caused by changes in the mode of conveyance;
+but we found six horses and one of the coaches of the country were
+better than four horses and two carriages of less capacity. Yosemite,
+I may tell my readers, means "Grizzly Bear" (it may be "Great Grizzly
+Bear"); but we only heard of one having been thereabouts for a long
+time, and I believe it was thoroughly tamed. After a glorious day in
+the woods, clambering up the steep from the Valley, and then on by the
+road--the only one--to Clarke's, halted there for the night, when we
+returned from a ceremonious visit to the "Big Trees." We had a most
+delightful ride from Bruce's, and a hard canter back through the woods
+on capital ponies, full of life and action, and very sure-footed, but
+rather inclined to have their own way, which was not always that of
+the rider. We turned into bed at Bruce's, quite delighted with our
+expedition, and rather anxious to see the road we had traversed in the
+dark by the garish light of day. Every traveller's tale, and every
+guide-book of recent date relating to this part of the world, has a
+full account of the dimensions, number, appearance, and condition of
+these wonders of the world. They are either prostrate, mutilated, or
+decaying; not one has survived the stormy life he must have led for
+some 3000 years--a few hundreds more or less do not signify. Those
+which remain upright are scarred by fire and lightning, and drop their
+monster arms, hung with ragged foliage and sheets of bright moss,
+mournfully over the ground where their trunks will repose in time to
+come. I cannot conceive any object of the kind so magnificent as one
+of those Washingtonias in the full vigour of mature treehood; but we
+could only fancy what it must have been like by measuring the stems,
+for there was not anywhere in the forest a tree to be seen which had
+not suffered. The best way to visit the scene--for it may well be
+called so--is to strike out from the road on the way to the Yosemite
+before the halt at Bruce's; but the hotel-keepers and stage-drivers
+will persuade the stranger, if they can, to defer the excursion till
+his return from the Valley, so as to make a half-day more out of him.
+
+_June 6th._--All up at 5 o'clock, and off soon after 6 A.M. The first
+stage, eleven miles, we did in two hours and ten minutes--a very
+pretty road; the second stage, eight miles, in forty-four minutes. The
+ravages made by fires are most deplorable. We had passed through this
+great forest track in the dark, but now seen in the morning light, the
+trunks of magnificent trees rotting on the ground, or standing upright
+with lifeless arms, consumed at the base, were visible everywhere.
+It is difficult to find out the exact truth about the cause of these
+fires. Some few people said "it was the Indians," but the weight of
+testimony attributes them to the shepherds, who for the most trifling
+purposes kindle a great fire. In some of the large trees they have
+hollowed out regular chambers, and of course the tree dies. Such waste
+of timber! For mile after mile we passed scenes of desolation which
+ere long those who allowed them will have cause to regret. From time
+to time we encountered on the road trains of waggons drawn by teams of
+handsome mules with bells, and had occasion to admire the economy of
+labour exhibited in the management, by which the driver is enabled to
+work a powerful break with one hand whilst he drives with the other.
+The next stage, of fourteen miles, was over an exceedingly bad road;
+but the horses were good, and we rattled along at a capital speed down
+towards the plain. Once the quick-eyed driver, pulling up suddenly,
+said, "See that rattle?" leaped down and made towards the bush; and
+as we followed him, sure enough we heard distinctly the noise of the
+snake, which he had intercepted on its way to a rabbit hole. It took
+refuge in a clump of bushes with gnarled roots, and coiled itself round
+one of the branches; but by a course of judicious and rather nervous
+poking it was driven from its vantage ground, and trying to escape was
+killed by the driver with a blow of his whip, followed by a good many
+unnecessary strokes from the rest of the party. It was over three feet
+long, and had just been making an evening meal upon a rabbit, which it
+had left where we had startled it; and it was evident from its swollen
+appearance that it had been for some time engaged in the warren close
+at hand.
+
+At 10.20 we reached Fresno, which is what the Americans call "quite
+a place," containing not only an hotel, a restaurant, and a store,
+but a shop where photographs were exhibited. The _chef-d'oeuvre_, a
+portrait of a Spanish lady 140 years of age, living at Los Angeles, did
+not, however, commend itself to our taste. We halted at Coarse Gold at
+11.40, and left at 12.35. Mr. Jerry Loghlan--who excused himself for
+not working on the ground that "there was no use in it, as there was
+nothing to be had," the mines being worked "out"--whose acquaintance we
+had made on the way up, a huge, broad-shouldered _vaurien_, was still
+hanging about with his specimens of quartz, gold, and rattlesnakes'
+tails, and a black eye recently acquired in battle.
+
+After a long, hot, and dusty drive, it was with no small gratification
+we made out on the flat the houses of Madera, and after a time the
+carriages of the special train. The air is so bright and pure that the
+distances are very deceptive, and it was nearly 5 o'clock P.M. before
+we reached the station, which had been visible for more than an hour
+previously. It was pleasant news to hear that the little German barber
+at the way-side had got baths all ready. In the rear of his shop there
+was a row of apartments, each provided with a clean zinc bath, hot and
+cold water to turn on at discretion, and an abundance of towels. This
+in the centre of a waste seemed very creditable to the civilisation
+of the people. I should like to know in what part of Europe you would
+get similar comfort under similar circumstances. I am afraid there are
+many parts of the British Islands where a traveller would demand such
+a luxury in vain. And the barber was there to shave those who needed
+it, and to give you all the news of the day if you wanted it. He was
+a Prussian, and he grinned from ear to ear as, in reply to my question
+whether he had served, he said: "Serve, indeed! Not I. I came away and
+escaped from all that nonsense. There is not a king or an emperor or a
+prince that I would fight for. Why should I?" "But," said I, "you would
+have to fight for the Republic here if it were in danger; and that
+would not be fighting for your fatherland." "Yes," said he, "it would,
+for this is my fatherland now. But I do not want to fight for it either
+if I can help it. Fighting is nonsense."
+
+Our excellent stewards received us, if not with open arms, with smiling
+faces. The carriages were trim and clean and fresh, the tables spread
+out, and all kinds of dainties provided for the evening meal. We rested
+quietly for the night in the siding at Madera, and got under weigh at
+5 o'clock on the morning of June 7th, the train being timed so as to
+reach San Francisco at 12.30.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+SAN FRANCISCO.
+
+ The Palace Hotel--General McDowell--Palo-Alto--The
+ "Hoodlums"--The Real Sir Roger--Exiles in the Far West--The
+ Chinese Population--For and Against them--The Sand Lot--Fast
+ Trotters--The Sea Lions--The Diamond Palace--The Coloured
+ Population--"Eastward Ho!"
+
+
+The British Consul, Mr. Booker, who has been watching over the
+interests of the Queen's subjects for some thirty years here, and who
+is an institution by himself, met the train at a place called, I think,
+Porta Costa, and welcomed the Duke and his friends. There had been
+for some days an infusion of the Chinaman in the general element of
+life along the line, but here it became concentrated, and then ceased
+to attract much attention. As the train approached the wide expanse
+of muddy water from the Sacramento, which charges down with impetuous
+volume, and colours the bay with its turbid stream, we could form an
+idea of some of the advantages in the expanse of navigable river, that
+had, however, lain long without appreciation but for the bright red
+gold possessed by San Francisco. The bay is animated; white canvassed
+craft stud its waters, and the smoke of steamers pollutes the clear,
+bracing air. Italian fishermen are busy with line and net, and flights
+of ducks and squadrons of gulls and cormorants show that the waters
+are well stocked. It was too late in the year to see the country in
+the full affluence of its wealth of fruit and crops, of hay and corn,
+and the hillsides and fields are now disappointingly brown. Presently
+we arrived at Oakland, where the train was run out on a pier 3500
+yards long, to the steam ferry-boat which was to convey us across
+to San Francisco. The ferry-boat was crowded, for Oakland is a city
+of some 50,000 people; and of course it had once on a time, not very
+remote, only a few sheds and insignificant houses. From this side of
+the bay the city of the Golden Gate, some miles away, was now visible
+in all its pride of place--pride but not beauty, now at least--for the
+city presents no great attraction to the eye. The streets, running in
+parallel lines at right angles to the quay right up the sandy hillside,
+look like the ribs of some stranded monster, "lank and lean and
+brown." The most prominent object is the hotel to which we are going,
+which towers far over the general level of house-top, steeple, and
+factory-chimney.
+
+There is a little pamphlet, crammed with statistics and with an array
+of figures and superlatives enough to daze one, given to the guests
+of the Palace Hotel; but those who are in that happy category scarcely
+need the information, and those who are not could not derive any idea
+of the building from the repetition of the ciphers which are to be
+found in the guide-book. The drawing on the outside affords the best
+notion of the size, but only actual purview can enable one to judge
+of the excellent arrangements, the service, the table. For once the
+American idol "Immensity" is not overlaid. "'Tis blinding bright--'tis
+blazing white! O Vulcan! what a glow!" Electric lights flooding the
+court with brightness beyond description. And what a court! Sweetness
+and light indeed! In the great quadrangle, 144 feet by 84, there are
+fountains playing, groups of statuary, and exotic plants, and, tier
+after tier, rise the pillared terraces outside the seven storeys of
+which the main building consists, painted a lustrous white, shining
+like purest Parian. There are 755 rooms, abounding in conveniences,
+and comfortably luxurious. Each is provided with high-pressure hot and
+cold water, and there is an elaborate system of ventilation, alarms,
+conductors, pneumatic tubes, telephones, and "annunciators" for fire,
+letters, servants, &c. The beds are excellent; the furniture admirable;
+and this vast structure, 120 feet high, 275 feet broad, and 350 feet
+deep, is not only fire, but--listen--"earthquake proof"; so says the
+bill of fare, and so says ex-Senator W. Sharon, the proprietor. I have
+not the least desire to test the truth of the averment, but if I must
+be in a hotel when an earthquake visits the city in which I am, let me
+be in the Palace, San Francisco. A man may live here in the enjoyment
+of a pretty continuous series of meals and one of the best bedrooms
+for four dollars a day, and there is a lower tariff of bed and board at
+three dollars a day.
+
+_June 8th._--Our first day was rendered exceedingly pleasant by the
+kindness of General McDowell. The weather did its very best to prevent
+our enjoying it, and was signally defeated. San Francisco is perhaps
+the windiest city in the world, and at this time of year there is
+almost always a storm in the harbour, and a steady, powerful, and
+somewhat chilly blast, setting in a little before noon, and lasting
+throughout the day until nearly sundown, up the streets. The General's
+aide-de-camps came over early to the hotel, in full uniform, in honour
+of Major-General Green, but General McDowell appeared in mufti, which
+eased us down a little. A powerful steamer, the "_General Macpherson_,"
+was prepared for the party, which was swollen by a considerable number
+of gentlemen invited by our host to meet the Duke, and the gentlemen
+from Topeka, who were included in the invitation. The excursion
+afforded a favourable opportunity of inspecting the city defences.
+From Alcatraz Fort, Point and Presidio Island batteries, which would
+not be considered very formidable as far as armament is concerned,
+although their position affords great advantages for torpedo defence,
+salutes were fired in honour of Sir Henry Green. But in the case of
+some of us the sight was marred by the rising sea, which increased to
+an inconvenient height as the steamer reached the Seal Rocks, close to
+the entrance to the bay. Of the seals I shall give an account farther
+on. They did not seem to mind the steamer very much until she blew her
+whistle, when many of them splashed into the sea. At the termination of
+the trip, which lasted some four hours, General McDowell entertained
+the party at his official quarters, which are beautifully situated on
+a bluff overhanging the water of the bay.
+
+_June 9th._--We spent, in some respects, an abortive and deceitful
+day; not, indeed, that there was anything disappointing about our
+entertainment at Belmont, under the auspices of ex-Senator Sharon;
+but that we started full of enterprise, and intent upon inspecting the
+great works of the Spring Valley Reservoir, and of making an excursion
+through what was described as a very beautiful county whence is
+brought the water supply of the great city in which we were sojourning.
+However, though we were baulked in the object of our expedition, the
+day passed, and not in the least degree unpleasantly, and instead of
+going to the Lakes we drove about the neighbourhood of Belmont, and
+visited several country seats.
+
+No one who visits San Francisco should omit taking an early opportunity
+of going to Palo-Alto to inspect the stock of General Stanford's
+thorough-breds, and the breeding establishment, which as a sample of
+perfect order and management cannot be surpassed. I cannot answer for
+the figures, but I was informed that the owner spends 25,000_l._ a year
+upon the maintenance of his stud and stables, and that he has not as
+yet sold a colt or filly, or parted with a single animal; sires, mares,
+and young brood now amounting to about 700 head. They are beautifully
+housed in detached stables fitted up with every convenience that a
+horse of the highest pedigree and most luxurious taste can desire.
+I was particularly struck with the perfect silence which prevailed
+throughout the stables. No shouts to "stand over there," and none of
+that "----" (groom's expletive) which is so common in our country.
+And partly owing perhaps to that mode of treatment, and to gentleness
+in handling, all the horses without exception seemed tractable and
+sweet-tempered. High-bred stallions stood out in the open for our
+inspection, and allowed themselves to be rubbed and felt without even
+laying down their ears or raising a hind-leg from the ground. In reply
+to a question respecting a remarkably beautiful animal, which seemed to
+have a little more fire in him, the head groom said "You may walk under
+his belly if you like," and then and there he told one of the grooms
+to do so, which the man did, without attracting any unusual degree of
+attention from the animal. Outside one of the large blocks of stables
+there is a kind of testing arena, in which we were told it was the
+pleasure of General Stanford, when he was at home, to sit watching the
+performance of his young horses. It is an ellipse, like a large circus,
+bordered with a hoarding, and in the centre there is a raised stage for
+the visitors, on which are revolving chairs. The riding-master, with an
+attendant, performing the functions of the late Mr. Widdicombe, sets
+the animal in motion, checking him when he breaks into a gallop. The
+speed at which the animal trots the ellipse is known by the time marked
+on a chronometer, and the fact is recorded for the information of the
+inspectors, who can turn round their chairs and follow the action of
+the horse as it trots round the ring.
+
+The district of the State in which Palo-Alto is situated boasts of
+several residences of the Californian millionaires. One house which
+we visited, I think belonging to Mr. Flood, furnished the most ornate
+and beautiful examples of woodwork that were ever seen by any of the
+party. The house, which was as large as a good-sized English country
+mansion, is constructed of timber of the finest quality, beautifully
+worked, painted and varnished; and with moderate care a mansion of this
+kind will last, in this climate, a couple of hundred years, which to
+the American mind is an eternity. There were artists from New York,
+and the staff of an upholsterer and decorator of great renown from the
+Empire City were still busily engaged in the place as we went through
+the rooms. The magnificent halls, reception-rooms, billiard-rooms,
+library, bedrooms, all fitted up with extraordinary luxuriousness,
+but in a somewhat florid taste, were of wood, the doors of many of
+the apartments arresting attention by their extraordinary beauty and
+finish. The ceilings decorated in fresco by Italian artists, and bright
+windows filled with stained glass gave an appearance of light and
+grace to the whole residence. The kitchen arrangements were marvels
+of ingenuity, and one envied the butler who would have such a pantry
+as that which was displayed for our inspection. Some of the pictures
+which were ready to be placed on the walls were remarkable, however,
+only for the richness of their frames; and, indeed, we heard that
+the excellent proprietor was not a man of very cultivated taste; a
+child of fortune, in the prime of life and of money-making, spending
+a portion of his enormous wealth with an easy hand, but destitute of
+what is called book-learning, and leaving to some future generation the
+cultivation of the graces and the acquirement of accomplishments which
+the circumstances of his early life had denied him to effect.
+
+It had been arranged that we should return to San Francisco to dinner,
+but Senator Sharon had in his secret heart resolved that we should do
+nothing of the kind, or at least, that if we did so, it should only be
+after we had partaken of such a feast at Belmont as would very much
+indispose us to test the capabilities of the _chef_ of the Palace
+Hotel. From Palo-Alto accordingly we were driven to the charming
+country house, some miles away, of the ex-senator of Oregon, and we
+were regaled there, after some delay, at a very elaborate _dejeuner_,
+sent out from San Francisco. It was nigh 8 o'clock ere we got back
+to the city; and the night ended by what might well be called "an
+excursion" to the Baldwin Theatre, which was at the time the most
+attractive of the places of entertainment of that sort open in the
+city. As some of us were walking back, after the play was over, with
+an American friend, talking of the "hoodlums," famous rowdies, who, we
+were assured, had been of late days utterly broken up by the vigilance
+of the police, our attention was attracted to a number of lads smoking
+at the corner of the street. Our friend said "Hoodlums broken up! There
+they are--don't you believe it. That's a lot of them, and if you were
+alone you might find out very unpleasantly that there are plenty of
+them."
+
+The San Francisco journalists possess astonishing powers of
+imagination. I rubbed my eyes when I read that I had described "with
+eloquence the similarity between a marsh at San Bruno and a patch
+of jungle in the north-west of Scinde, where I had the felicity
+of spending three weeks with General Green while the natives were
+arranging a plan to capture the party and cut our throats." I never
+was in the north-west of Scinde in my life, and, although I had the
+pleasure of passing a longer time in his company in the United States,
+and of being on the same plateau before Sebastopol when he was there,
+for a still longer period, many years before, I never spent three
+weeks there with General Green. The Duke was described as "professing,
+but showing, little enthusiasm." However, these matters are of very
+slight interest or importance; only one wonders how many of the readers
+of this sort of literary work believe in it. One of our party has,
+according to a local paper, become a clergyman, and now rejoices in the
+style and title of "the Bishop," by which he is universally addressed
+by the party.
+
+While in the train, on our way to Belmont, I had the pleasure of
+being introduced to a gentleman who, although a lawyer in very large
+practice, is General of the State Volunteers; and in the course of
+conversation, I heard that he had papers containing the statement of
+a gentleman who had visited, and which convinced him that the real
+Roger Tichborne was living not very far from San Francisco. General
+Barnes, whose name and character stand high in the city of the Golden
+Gate, and whom I found to be a gentleman of great intelligence, seemed
+perfectly satisfied by the story told by this new "claimant"; but what
+he mentioned to me did not at all tend to create in my mind any notion
+that he was not an impostor, and especially were my doubts confirmed by
+the quotations which General Barnes made from some of the narrative, in
+which there was a ridiculous jumble of French and English, in order to
+justify, apparently, the stress placed by the "claimant" in his story
+on that part of his life which was passed in France. He spoke of his
+uncle as "mon oncle," and of Thursday as "Jeudi," and so on. However,
+General Barnes appeared to be so impressed by the truthfulness of the
+man's bearing, and by the full details he gave him at an audience
+in which he supplied the facts for the consecutive narrative which
+I was promised, that I expressed a desire to read it. General Barnes
+subsequently sent me a long written paper containing the heads of the
+claimant's story, a perusal of which strengthened the conviction I
+had previously entertained. I only mention this circumstance because
+there was a report spread throughout the Press, by the agency of one
+of the great telegraphic associations which furnish the American
+public with intelligence, that the Duke of Sutherland and myself
+had interviewed the real Roger Tichborne at San Francisco, and had
+satisfied ourselves that he was the man; and innumerable "headings"
+were invented for this supposed interview, of which I was soon made
+aware on my return westward in every newspaper that I read. I promptly
+denied the statement that the Duke or myself had seen the new claimant,
+and although the denial appeared in print I was exasperated day after
+day by being asked questions afterwards with regard to this supposed
+conversation with Tichborne at San Francisco, and by inquiries as to
+my real impression; so it would appear that no one had seen or paid
+any attention to the refutation of the story which had brought down
+on my devoted head communications from friends of other Tichbornes,
+of whom there are several living, some in poverty and others in
+comparative affluence, in various cities and districts of the United
+States. I had further the mortification of seeing it stated in print
+that I had used disparaging words in alluding to the credulity of
+General Barnes, which was an entirely baseless fabrication. With all
+the extraordinary keenness of the American mind generally, there is
+associated with it a considerable amount of the Anglo-Saxon quality
+which is termed "gullibility," and the land swarms with impostors who
+make a living out of the easy faith of the population. I do not speak
+merely of spiritualists, quacks, and professors of peculiar religions
+or medical dogmas, nor of the preachers of eccentric forms of faith or
+unbelief, but of the mass of persons who contrive to get an existence
+by representing that they are "someone else." Although their tricks
+are well known, the trade still flourishes. They are always the "sons
+of peers," who have got into disgrace with their families, but who
+will eventually be owners of castles of historic fame and of enormous
+estates; "distinguished soldiers"; "Maids of Honour to the Queen,"
+who for some unknown reasons are living in small out-of-the-way
+villages in the West; or political conspirators who have played a great
+part on some distinguished stage and have saved themselves from the
+consequences of defeated enterprize by taking refuge in the States.
+And then there are hordes of persons who are known by the title of
+"confidence men," who travel about on the trains or in the steamers,
+looking out for victims, or lounging about the bars and saloons,
+waiting for their prey in the shape of some facile and easy-eared
+stranger, who in consideration of their merits and distress shall give
+them temporary assistance. Sometimes, doubtless, there are cases of
+very real suffering, sorrow, and poverty, to which exile in the United
+States affords a melancholy refuge. I was obliged to hear in one great
+city of a gallant soldier who, reduced to poverty by no fault of his
+own, had quitted England and given up the society of his friends,
+and lived in a small suburb of a town on the coast of the Pacific,
+his secret known only to one or two officials, shunning all contact
+with his countrymen and evading as far as possible all inquiries of
+his friends. In San Francisco, where there is a poor-house open to
+strangers and to native-born Americans alike, there are, I am told, to
+be met with extraordinary exemplifications of the "downs" of fortune.
+Adventurous and daring spirits, and pioneers of civilisation, at one
+time probably possessed of wealth which was wasted in dissipation,
+or lost in unfortunate speculations, are there, talking of the days
+that are gone, in all languages of the world, and awaiting their end;
+while others who started with them in the same race are building their
+palaces or revelling in the enjoyment of wealth, compared to which our
+greatest fortunes are, if figures can be trusted, a mere bagatelle. How
+rapidly some of these fortunes can be made was illustrated by numerous
+stories connected with some of the richest men in California. I was
+told by an eminent tradesman of San Francisco that one day a miner came
+into his establishment to buy a watch, which he said must be cheap
+and good, for he wanted something he could trust to in the matter of
+time, as he was going off with a party on an exploring expedition
+after gold. This was in the early time of the great "booms" in the
+West. He selected a watch, for which he paid $40, and departed. The
+following day he appeared in the shop and asked to see the proprietor,
+and then, producing the watch, he said he would like to have $30 for
+it, as he had lost all his money in a "spree" the night before and
+must have something to start with. The jeweller said, "Well, I will
+return you what you gave me for the watch, as it has suffered no harm,
+and you shall have your $40 back again." The man went away exceedingly
+rejoiced, and the incident was forgotten. Some eighteen months
+afterwards a man came to the establishment, and looking at rings, gold
+chains, and jewellery of the most costly character, and asking for the
+best of everything that they had got, gave orders which occasioned the
+attendant to have some doubts as to his sanity, or certainly as to the
+means he had of paying the amount, which was rapidly running up to tens
+of thousands of dollars. So he sought out his principal. The strange
+customer said, "I suppose you don't know me?" which was admitted to
+be the case. He went on buying all the same, making the remark, "You
+need not be uneasy about the money, for So-and-so (the bankers) will
+tell you I am all right, and when you send the things home you shall
+be paid. I am Joe Smith, from whom some time ago you took a watch he
+bought from you when he came to your store, and gave him the full value
+for it when he was in want of money," and so departed, having shown his
+gratitude by buying 6000_l._ worth of jewellery. This worthy miner is
+now one of the wealthy pillars of the State.
+
+The Chinese quarter of San Francisco has been described, I will not say
+_ad nauseam_, but as often as any book has been written which contains
+an account of a visit to the city of the Golden Gate. Of course we
+went there, and saw all that was to be seen under the best possible
+auspices, for Mr. Bee, whom I have already mentioned, was our guide
+and companion, assisted by an exceedingly intelligent officer of the
+police force; and on the occasion of our second visit, when we went to
+the theatre, we had the advantage of being under the protection of the
+gentleman who represents law and order, on behalf of the municipality,
+in connection with the Chinese population and the arrangements for
+theatrical performances.
+
+The inspection of the dreadful den in which the opium-smokers were to
+be seen suggested to my mind a train of thought in connection with the
+traffic which I would not willingly have communicated to my American
+friends. It will seem incredible some day to the awakened conscience
+of the nation that we should have ever sanctioned such a frightful
+crime as the opium traffic. "It only poisons about two millions of
+people," is the excuse, "and brings in one-sixth of the whole revenue
+of India." If ever it were justifiable to utter the exclamation "Perish
+India!" it would be, I believe, in regard to that disgraceful source of
+revenue, and the necessity that is imposed upon us, as it is alleged,
+to raise it, in order to maintain the government of our Indian empire.
+Here in San Francisco the State has nothing to do with the sale of the
+poison, and it is very questionable whether the police regulations
+should not be applied to it, just as they are to persons who have
+tried to commit suicide, or to the inebriates in public-houses, or to
+places where intemperance is carried on to an extent injurious to the
+public peace. Death is the inevitable result of continued indulgence
+in opium-smoking, although it is true that in some cases the victim
+lingers on a few years, utterly indifferent to all the business of life
+except the one--the means of supplying himself with his only source
+of enjoyment. I was in one of the shops where they sell the drug, and
+was much struck by the cadaverous, sunken faces of the unfortunate
+customers, with bright dreamy eyes, trembling limbs, and wasted bodies,
+who came in to buy it. It is cheap enough, in all conscience, as a very
+small quantity suffices to produce what is called "the desired effect";
+but for its bulk it is exceedingly dear, and indulgence in it must
+consume a considerable amount of the earnings of the best-paid artisans
+when they are no longer able to earn sufficient to keep them with a
+full supply. "Then," as our informant says, "they will commit any crime
+to get it."
+
+The general impression made upon me by the appearance of the Chinese
+population was most favourable. I do not now speak of what one might
+see in going through the haunts where the police regulations assign
+exclusive possession to certain classes of the population, which, sooth
+to say, seemed numerous enough; I refer to the business quarters, and
+to the crowds of cleanly, intelligent, well-behaved people of both
+sexes in the streets. General McDowell, and many other persons, for
+whose opinion the greatest respect must be entertained, look with
+apprehension on the effect of the Chinese immigration, and have,
+indeed, declared that it will destroy the Union if it be not checked;
+and these apprehensions are based upon the possibility that in time
+millions on millions of the swarming population of China will inundate
+the United States, gradually overrun town after town, usurping all
+the fields of labour, and beating down the white man to the greatest
+misery by competition in every branch of trade, industry, and labour.
+This party has successfully, I believe, impressed its views upon a
+considerable number of senators and representatives in the Eastern
+States, who can exercise pressure on the Supreme Government; and
+the treaty recently signed between the Republic and China contains
+provisions which enable the authorities at the western seaports to
+exercise considerable control over the current of emigration. But, on
+the other hand, it is alleged that the fears which are expressed of
+a rapidly increasing exodus of Chinese from China, and an anabasis
+into the United States, are purely imaginary--in fact, unreal and
+pretentious. The pro-Chinese party allege that the emigration comes
+from only one port in one province, and that you may go all over the
+West, and ask any Chinaman or Chinawoman where he or she comes from,
+and you are met with the invariable answer, from the one port. The
+friends of the Chinese--arguing, moreover, that the State at large
+is benefited enormously by the accession to its resources from the
+Celestial Empire, and that the labour was attacked, not because it
+was cheap, but because it was good; that it is now indispensable, for
+without Chinamen and Chinawomen it would be almost impossible to carry
+on the ordinary life of these cities--allege that the agitation which
+has been so violent in San Francisco is mainly encouraged by those
+who want to secure the Irish vote. Colonel Bee represents these views
+very strongly. He argues that Canton, not larger than the State of
+New Hampshire, is the sole source of emigration. He insists on it that
+there are no more than 100,000 Chinese in the whole of the Union, and
+that for the last ten years the emigrants have not sufficed to fill
+the places of those who had gone home with money, never intending to
+return, or who had died. He maintains, indeed, that the Chinese are
+decreasing rather than otherwise; and with all the power of figures,
+which he has at his fingers' ends as Consul, demonstrates that a very
+large proportion of the Chinese who are entered as arriving at San
+Francisco and other parts are the same men and women as those who came
+some years previously and went back to their native country, returning
+to gain more dollars.
+
+The principal enemies of the Chinese are the Irish, who, having
+monopolised the whole of the work of bricklayers, plasterers, carters,
+porters, and general labourers until their arrival, have been forced
+to reduce their rates of labour steadily by the competition of the
+Chinaman.
+
+The part of the population of San Francisco denominated the Sand lot,
+and especially those connected with the political associations of the
+city, do not by any means share Colonel Bee's views; but the agitation
+is dying out, and the meetings, which were of weekly occurrence, to
+excite the people against the Mongolians have decreased in number,
+importance, and interest. The directors of public companies, and
+the contractors for public works, are all in favour of the Chinese
+workman, who is sober, industrious, and orderly; and although the trade
+combinations among them are exceedingly subtle, and their powers of
+association for trade purposes remarkable, being moreover the most
+ancient in the world, the Chinese in the Western States have not as
+yet taken to indulge in the luxury of strikes. As domestic servants,
+nurses, and attendants on children, they appear to be affectionate
+and careful; and nothing could be better than the service of the hotel
+in which we were lodged, the great portion of which was carried on by
+Chinamen and women.
+
+_June 10th._--In the spacious courtyard of the Palace Hotel, at
+7 o'clock this morning, there might have been observed three
+well-appointed waggons (as Americans call the vehicle more
+appropriately termed "spider" at the Cape), each with two horses
+of race, fast trotters, panting for a spin through the city and the
+Park out to the shores of the Pacific. The Duke and Sir H. Green and
+Mr. Stephen were driven by Mr. Howard. Mr. Wright was "personally
+conducted" by Mr. ----, and I was put behind a pair of as handsome
+chestnuts as could well be seen anywhere, of which the owner and
+driver (General Barnes) was very reasonably proud. The streets of
+San Francisco, like those of most of the American cities we have
+visited, are atrociously paved; the torture of driving over boulders
+is aggravated by the sharp ribs of the tram ways, so that it is not
+pleasant, if, indeed, it be possible, to drive rapidly till the limit
+of municipal incompetence or fraud be passed. But once out on the
+suburbs the chestnuts were invited to step it, and were bowling along
+at a good fourteen miles an hour on our way to the Park, over as good
+a road as horse or man ever felt under hoof or foot. The Park not long
+ago was a waste of sand, it is now swarded and planted with shrubs, and
+luxuriant with flowers. Notices that it was unlawful to do more than
+ten miles an hour were posted up, but the General did not pay strict
+attention to them till he came near shady places, where experience
+warned him that policemen might be lying privily in ambush. The pace
+was quickened till the waggon seemed to fly through the air rather
+than move over the ground. It was the perfection of travelling on
+wheels--almost as buoyant as a headlong gallop. The waggon weighed but
+180 lb., the powerful animals "scarcely felt it more than their tails."
+I had a turn at the reins by "kind permission" of the General. The art
+of driving trotters needs practice. You must keep a strong, steady
+pull on the head, or they "break." Very soon I had the satisfaction
+of making the chestnuts break the law with a vengeance, and of hearing
+the General say, "We are just within the three minutes! not ten seconds
+inside it!"--that is, of trotting at the rate of just twenty miles an
+hour. Up hill and down hill, and along the flat out of the Park and
+over the smooth road, and in half an hour the Pacific was in sight, and
+the murmurs of the surf rose above the rhythm of the regular beat of
+the eight hoofs in front of us! Cliff House was in view. Seal Rocks,
+in their setting of foam, lay before us, and in forty minutes from the
+time we left the hotel, despite policemen, miles of bad pavements, and
+tramways, we drew up at the steps of Cliff House, nine miles from San
+Francisco, and the trotters had not turned a hair. From the verandah
+at the sea front of the hotel, we enjoyed for half an hour a spectacle
+which is, as far as I know, unique. At the distance of 500 or 600 yards
+from the beach at our feet there is a group of four very rugged rocks,
+with serrated edges and tops, the sides broken here and there into
+ledges and small platforms. They are too small to be called islands,
+the largest being, as it seemed, not 100 yards wide. The slopes are
+not, I think, so steep as they looked on the land side. On the two
+largest of these rocks there were herds of sea-lions, so close that we
+could see, through very poor opera-glasses, with the greatest ease,
+their eyes, teeth, and whiskers, as they reposed or played with each
+other. Some had clambered to the highest ledges, escalading the sides
+by a series of painful-looking struggles with their flappers; others
+were fast asleep in cosy nooks; some were tossing their heads about and
+making believe to bite each other in sport; the younger ones were bent
+on teasing their fathers and mothers by uncouth gambols. As they played
+or moved they uttered cries between a bark and a roar; now and then the
+noise was like that of a pack of hounds in full cry, and the effect of
+the strange sound mingling with the tumult of the surf and the beat of
+the waves was most singular and "eldrich." Those fresh from the sea
+were shining black, but became lighter as they dried. The older ones
+were not darker than cinnamon bears or unwashed sheep. As many of those
+on the rocks had not long left the water the general effect of the
+herd put one in mind of a gathering of enormous slugs on cabbages--not
+a poetic simile, but a just one, I think. Occasionally a sea-lion,
+hungry or bored by his companions, threw himself with a splash into the
+wave, and it was interesting to watch the rapidity and actual grace of
+his movements in the sea compared with his laborious efforts on the
+land. One could see them quite clearly through the body of the heavy
+billows; occasionally a bold one would glide close on shore and fish
+in the edge of the surf, raising his head and shoulders clear above
+the surface, and then diving out of sight. They were cruising about
+in every direction. You remember the sea-lion at the Zoo, of which the
+French attendant was so fond? Well, the creatures below and before us
+were most of them double the size of that fellow, and several exceeded
+the largest ox in size. The monsters are quite well known; one is named
+Ben Butler, "because he is such a great beast." They were formerly
+protected by law, but some one thought they killed too many fish, and
+the law was repealed. They are safe all the same, for there is a law
+against the discharge of firearms within 300 yards of an inhabited
+dwelling; Cliff House throws its aegis over the sea-lions in that wise;
+but the quantity of fish which must be devoured by these mountainous
+phocae (an they be so) daily would maintain a decently-sized city. The
+hide furnishes the "sealskin" used to cover trunks, and the body yields
+oil fat, and the tusks are close, white, and hard. These sea-lions
+breed far away up north, and come with their young regularly every
+year to the same resorts; but incessant war is waged upon them by the
+sealers and whalers, so that the chances are against the beast where he
+is not protected by law, and their numbers do not increase. Altogether,
+the spectacle was one never to be forgotten. A hotel, with oysters
+awaiting us for a forebreakfast refection in the background, waggons
+from Michigan, horses from Kentucky, all the apparatus of civilised
+life close at hand, the Pacific and its strange wild denizens at our
+feet! "Let us turn in and have an oyster." "What! oysters in June?"
+"Yes, and good ones too." In this favoured land oysters are in season
+all the year round. There are no oysters found on the coast, I am told,
+and they will not breed. They are brought all the way from the Atlantic
+coast when they are mere oysterlets, and they are laid down in the
+Pacific, where they grow fat and large, but are not "crossed in love,"
+and therefore are fit to be eaten from January to January. They are
+about the size of a spring chicken, and need some courage on the part
+of an assailant who desires to dispose of them as he would a native.
+
+This was our last day in the city of the Golden Gate, and the
+photographers were masters of the situation; and there was much
+_debris_ of sight-seeing to sweep up--visits to be made, shops to be
+inspected, among which I must mention specially the Diamond Palace
+of Colonel Andrews, one of the handsomest jeweller's "stores" in
+the world, though it is not as large as the establishments of the
+principal firms in London, Paris, Vienna, or as Tiffany's in New
+York. The distinctive feature of the interior is the decoration of the
+paintings of fair women, on the ceiling and the walls above the cases,
+by necklaces, diadems, zones, and other feminine ornaments of real
+diamonds, emeralds, rubies, and pearls. The pictures are the work of
+an Italian artist of merit, and the general effect is very striking;
+but I doubt whether it is a good way of inducing people to buy the
+articles which bedeck the ideal beauties. At Bradley and Rulofson's
+we saw photographs of many of our friends, and had one more proof of
+the smallness of the world. Every one we knew seemed to have visited
+San Francisco. There we all submitted to inevitable fate, and left our
+negatives behind us, but the Duke was captured by a rival photographic
+institution, and had a sitting all to himself.
+
+The aspect of a crowd in a large American city differs from that of
+the passers-by in the street of an English town, most of all in the
+appearance of such a large proportion of coloured people. Here it may
+be said, however, that they are colourless, as the prevailing hue of
+the foreign population is that of the Chinaman. In Canada the number
+of negroes, or of persons of negro descent, of varying gradations of
+colour, is remarkable, considering the circumstances, but they probably
+may be accounted for by the emigration in the olden times of those
+who were escaping from slavery, or who went with their masters and
+employers into the Dominion. In the cities on the Lakes I was very
+much struck by the persons of undoubted African descent who are to
+be met with in the streets in great numbers; and in Chicago there is
+a quarter nearly exclusively occupied by them--honest, industrious,
+hard-working people seemingly, given to stand about at the street
+corners, however, a good deal on Sundays, and cultivating a bright
+attire, especially on the part of the ladies, whose bonnets and
+shawls were things to wonder at. There are loafers amongst them, as
+there are amongst their betters; but, taking them all in all, in the
+Northern, Western, and Atlantic States, they are a decidedly useful
+element in the population, easing the burden of labour to the white
+man, and following many occupations, such as those of waiters, barbers,
+bricklayers, and labourers in the less skilled sort of work, for which
+it would be difficult to find American substitutes. One peculiarity,
+which may be accounted for by some wiser person than myself, seems to
+be their recklessness as to what they put on their heads. Whether it
+is merely a compliance with the custom of the white man, which impels
+them to cover the highly effective protection against sun and cold
+which Nature has given them, or not; or whether it is that the canons
+of taste in such matters have not yet settled down to those accepted
+by people in civilised life in the Western world, the male negro has
+the most extraordinary indifference as to the quality and shape of the
+thing which he calls a hat or cap, and it would not be easy to find out
+of the gutters of some Irish country town anything more dilapidated,
+battered, and utterly incoherent than some of the hats which one may
+see on the heads of people of colour, especially down South. Whatever
+other virtues they may have, neatness is not amongst them; for, with
+all their affectation of finery, their clothes are generally ill-kept,
+their houses are unkempt, and, where they are cultivators of the soil,
+the operations are performed in a slovenly manner. The traditions of
+the old plantation have descended upon them, and influence them.
+
+On my way from Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the bankers in Montgomery
+Street--I believe the former of these gentlemen has had the
+privilege of giving his name to steamers and cities, leastways
+railway stations--I saw a party of sailors belonging to the United
+States steamer "_Rodgers_," now about to proceed in search of the
+"_Jeannette_," and I was much struck by their resemblance to our own
+bluejackets in general "cut of the jib," dress, face, and figure.
+They were in charge of a smart-looking officer, and had been paying a
+farewell visit to the fruit and vegetable markets--one of the sights of
+the city. They were in high good-humour, laughing and chatting loudly,
+more than is the wont of Americans, and I could not but contrast
+their fine physique with that of the soldiers we had seen at Sir Henry
+Green's parade when General McDowell took us round the harbour. The
+detachment at the Fort, consisting of infantry and artillerymen, and
+squads of different regiments, had some weedy veterans in the ranks,
+who had lost their setting up and did not look fit for much work; but
+the sailors, probably a picked lot, were good all round.
+
+_A propos_ of Messrs. Donahue and Kelly, the number of wealthy
+men in San Francisco of Irish origin or nationality is remarkable.
+Millionaires with names of Milesian prefixes and terminations are
+phenomenal. We had intended to return to the East Coast by way of Utah,
+and to stay a day or two at Salt Lake City, but the railroad company
+did not consider it expedient to give the party the facilities which
+had been accorded in every other instance by the American authorities
+to the Duke and his friends. To have gone round Salt Lake City would
+have cost a couple of hundred pounds more for haulage, and we were
+much more interested in seeing Leadville and Denver than the City of
+the Mormons; the game was not thought to be worth the candle, and
+it was resolved that we would go back as we came, in charge of the
+representatives of the Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railroad Company.
+It was only one item more in the long list of things we ought to have
+seen if we could, and I can safely say that we had a large share of the
+common experience of travellers in regard to the relations between the
+possible and the impossible in the course of a journey in a strange
+land, where there are for ever cropping up representations that "you
+really ought not to leave without seeing" so and so. The evening of our
+last day was passed in the society of General McDowell, Mr. Morgan,
+the English Consul, Colonel Bee, and others, who had done so much to
+make the visit to San Francisco all that could be desired, and whose
+courtesy and kindness will ever be remembered by every one of us most
+gratefully. Like Sir Charles Coldstream, we "had seen everything,
+done everything," but, unlike him, had found there was plenty in it.
+The street railway--most ingenious and successful, invaluable in a
+hilly city like Lisbon--the Chinese Theatre, the Joss houses--shops,
+eating-houses, opium dens of the Chinese quarter, the clubs, the
+principal buildings, the streets, the shops, the markets, the harbour,
+the suburbs, and country round about--all had been inspected, and
+yet each day we were told that we were doing positive injustice to
+ourselves and to the objects which were perforce neglected. In the
+morning there was a levee in the hotel to bid the Duke good-bye and
+see the party start on their return journey. At the very last moment a
+gentleman came forward with a proposal to take us to the North Pole by
+balloon, but there was not time to consider it in all its bearings and
+the offer was declined with thanks. We started at 10 A.M., and the Duke
+was attended to the boat and to the station across the water by a large
+body of San Franciscans, who took leave ere the train started. The
+gentlemen who were with us on the journey westwards attended the Duke
+on his way towards the Eastern States. All day we travelled through
+California--"the hot furnace"--which at first, however, proved to be
+only very warm, and the coloured servants had constant supplies of iced
+compounds to be drunk for the solace of the homeward bound, and had
+laid in a stock of San Franciscan luxuries to soothe the way.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+CALIFORNIA TO COLORADO.
+
+ Los Angeles--Mud-geysers--"Billy the Kid"--General
+ Fremont--Manitou, the Garden of the Gods--Desperadoes--Bob
+ Ingersoll--Denver City--Leadville--Grand Canyon.
+
+
+_June 12th._--The train stopped at Los Angeles at six in the morning,
+and, drawing up my window-blind, the first person I saw on the platform
+was our good friend Colonel Baker, who had come to meet us, intent
+on the good offices which he could render during our stay. These were
+exhibited in the form of a beautiful bouquet for Lady Green, baskets
+of limes and oranges, and great bunches of grapes. In this happy valley
+there are cares as in the rest of the world. The Colonel told us he was
+in the midst of a great litigation affecting his claim to a large tract
+of land in which there are said to exist the richest tin-mines in the
+American Continent. Yet why should he care about his tin-mine? There
+were rolling acres rich with corn and fruit, and there were flocks and
+herds and vineyards, and a charming home of his own. Nevertheless, if
+the want of that tin-mine made him at all unhappy, I am sure those who
+were indebted to him, as we were, for so many kindnesses, will wish his
+claim to be triumphantly asserted, and long possession of all that is
+to follow.
+
+I dreaded the passage of the Desert to Yuma; and indeed the heat was
+intense. No wonder that with the thermometer ranging from 100 deg. to 104 deg.,
+all the blinds in the car were pulled down, and we sprawled listlessly
+on the cushions. Our excellent attendants put forth all the resources
+of art in the shape of ice and preparations of limes and cocktails;
+but the temperature would not be baffled. We could just read, and were
+aware that we were living, and some of us had strength enough now and
+then to execute forays against flies with napkins to drive them out
+of the carriages. How could people live out in the open, and work in
+the mines, or pursue any out-of-door employment in such torrid heat?
+Nevertheless, there was a marked distinction between it and the heat to
+be endured with the mercury at an equal height in India.
+
+The speed of the train was very respectable--somewhat over twenty miles
+an hour--and at that rate we ran from San Gorgonio and Banning on to
+Cabazon, through a flat plain, dry and burnt up, very like the desert
+around Suez, and fringed, like it, with rocky and rugged hills, save
+that there was a great growth of Spanish bayonets and cactuses of all
+kinds among the stones and sand, and that snow was to be seen on all
+the hill-tops in the distance. For 107 miles there was no water to
+be met with going along this plain; but the mirage, of which I have
+spoken in the account of our journey to San Francisco, was frequent
+and beautiful; and again I was fascinated by the sight of lovely lakes
+embowered in trees, with stately cities on their shores, changing and
+shifting and melting away, only again to assume apparent substance to
+cheat the senses.
+
+Once the train stopped to allow the passengers to visit the
+mud-geysers, which were not more than 150 yards on the left of the
+line, and with commendable curiosity most of us got out and walked
+over the baked earth to the spot. There was no mark whatever of smoke
+or vapour to indicate the place; and it was almost startling to come
+suddenly upon a kind of pond of semi-liquid mud, fifty or sixty feet
+in diameter, on which huge bubbles, varying in size from an orange to
+a hogshead, were continually forming and bursting. There was a faint
+sulphurous smell, and the ground around the liquefied portion of the
+surface, where the bubbles were breaking, was hot and cracked. The
+conductor said that all attempts to reach the bottom of the holes
+through which the bubbles arose had failed. Two of these geysers
+were in active operation, and the plain away to the left of the rail
+was said to contain a great number of them. After all it was very
+unsatisfactory to see this ebullition going on without being able to
+account for it; and, generally, I think we thought less of each other
+and of our information after visiting them, and finding out that not
+one of us had any theory on the subject which would bear either fire or
+water.
+
+I do not think I ever saw a sunset more beautiful than that which
+marked the close of this day--certainly not in India or South Africa,
+nor on the prairie, for which they make claims of surpassing beauty in
+the matter of sunsets. As it died out, I felt that "thing of beauty"
+could not "be a joy for ever," for it was a combination of colour and
+of form, including sky and mountain, that it would be impossible to see
+again.
+
+The kindness of which we have had so many proofs, has followed,
+accompanied, and preceded us all unremittingly and unweariedly. A
+rough with some Bourbon on board mounted to-day the steps of the
+car at a station, and insisted on seeing "this Duke." When he was
+told that the object of his attention was engaged, he said, "This
+is a land of liberty (as in his case it was), and he doesn't want a
+bodyguard with him!" But the conductor sent him away about his business
+without trouble. On the platform at Benson a few miners asked "the
+Duke to come out and show himself." The people at the stations were
+generally satisfied with a quiet peep; now and then an enthusiastic
+Scotchman claimed a shake hands, which was always accorded to him. A
+sleeper placed across the rails (accounted for by the officers on the
+hypothesis that some loafer without a ticket had been turned off by the
+conductor, and had put the sleeper in the way of the train to wreak
+his vengeance--a thing which has occurred nearer home) was the only
+substantial danger to which we were here exposed.
+
+The heat (June 13th) was intense. The thermometer rose to 105 at one
+o'clock in the day, and it was little comfort to us to be told that at
+Deming it had been up to 110 the day before.
+
+For some days we have been supping full of horrors, indeed
+breakfasting and dining on them, for the papers contain accounts of
+the extraordinary homicides all about this region. Tucson, Benson,
+Wilcox--all these places were resounding with the exploits of "Billy
+the Kid." Now at Tucson there is, I believe, a man whose name was once
+amongst the very foremost in the United States. Who some twenty years
+and more ago had not heard of General Fremont, "the Pathfinder," the
+adventurous traveller, the energetic politician, the dashing soldier?
+He had gone at the outbreak of the war to take up the chief command
+in the west with all the pomp and circumstance of glorious war. I was
+somewhat astonished to find that he was at Tucson, the governor of the
+Territory, on a humble salary, apparently the world-forgetting and
+the world-forgot, while "Billy-the-Kid" was perpetrating numberless
+atrocities under his nose, and Mr. Pat Garrett was dressing up his
+loins with his revolver-belt, and about to go forth with a chosen band
+of citizens and seek the redoubtable William.[A]
+
+A person who has only seen settled States in Europe, or the Eastern
+States of the North American Continent, cannot form any notion of a
+territory which has become a centre of attraction to all the wild
+adventurers and daring spirits which society, in the process of
+formation, throws out as a sort of advanced guard. In Arizona, in
+1870, according to the American Almanac, out of a total population
+of 9658, 2729 could not write and 2690 could not read. Of the total
+population, 2491 were foreign born, and 2753 were natives, the rest
+being coloured or under ten years of age. In New Mexico, out of 91,000
+people, 48,000 over ten years of age could not read, and 51,000 whites
+over ten years of age could not write. It may be inferred from such
+figures what is the general condition of the labouring classes in these
+States and Territories. The inhabitants of these States have doubled
+in the last ten years. They are filling up at a rate inconceivably
+great--so great, indeed, that American newspapers are fairly bewildered
+and American statesmen appalled by the rush across the Rocky Mountains
+and down the rivers, although as yet but a small proportion of the
+immense stream of immigrants has flooded the outlying territories. "At
+this rate," exclaims a Western editor, "the old monarchies of Europe
+will soon be depopulated." When Mr. Lincoln, in 1861, addressed his
+inaugural to the expectant States he expressed his confident belief
+that there were children then born who would live to see the flag of
+the Union floating over no less than 100,000,000 of human beings. The
+recent census of the United States gives a return of 51,000,000 of
+people, but the most eminent statisticians have arrived at the belief
+that the progress and increase of the States will not be at the same
+rapid rate as that which marked the history of the Republic since the
+cessation of the great civil war. It may be fairly inferred, however,
+that at the end of this century the population of the United States
+will greatly exceed that of Russia, or that of any empire except
+China and Great Britain, including Hindostan. The population, on
+each period of ten years, has increased at an average of more than
+30 per cent.; in fact, nearer 33 per cent., and the centre of it has
+travelled westward at the rate of more than fifty miles every ten
+years, till the centre of population is now eight miles west by south
+from Cincinnati. In 1800 the Union extended over only 239,935 square
+miles. Its flag now floats over 1,272,239 square miles of States and
+over 1,800,000 square miles of Territory governed by the central power
+at Washington. "We cannot think," exclaims a Republican writer, "that
+the war of rebellion settled all our troubles and made us secure in
+our Republic. This enormous growth of the practically unknown West
+reveals to us the grave dangers that threaten our nation. We meet
+there the tremendous influences of alien races and alien religions."
+The Americans of New England and of the Eastern States do not feel
+anxious on that score, because their institutions are thoroughly
+founded, their character formed, and they trust to the great power of
+accomplished facts to assimilate the alien elements and sustain the
+fabric of the Republic. The bugbear of a great Chinese immigration
+has ceased to practically influence Californian politics, and it may
+be safely assumed that the bulk of the future immigrants from the
+Celestial Empire will only come from the same sources as those which
+have hitherto supplied the stream. No wonder, however, that thoughtful
+Americans--and there are many who think of the future of their country
+as something quite apart from dollars--are filled with grave anxieties
+when they see such floods of purely foreign material, which will in
+all probability exercise a preponderating influence over the politics
+of the Great Republic, surging into the States. Particularly have the
+home missionary clergy, as they are styled, been struck by the enormous
+influence which this foreign immigration has exercised. According
+to one authority, the Rev. Mr. Stimson, of Worcester, "it is not a
+question of spreading any particular form of Christianity or of Church
+government, but a momentous struggle of American institutions with
+alien civilisations and religions for the control of the great Western
+country. The problem is not a matter of cleaning door-yards, but of
+saving a continent for freedom." The Chinese Question and the Indian
+Question are, they think, as nothing compared with the Irish Question
+and the German Question. "The Republic," we are told, "stands on a
+foundation as broad as humanity itself," whatever that may mean, "but
+its condition of existence is a universal regard for the interests of
+all." Often during the course of the Duke of Sutherland's excursion
+it was our good fortune to fall in with men of great political and
+social knowledge. The future of the Republic is, in the mind of these
+men, clouded with uncertainty and doubt. They are apprehensive of
+some unknown danger. It may be corruption of political life leading
+to want of faith in free institutions; it may be the rival energies
+and the opposing interests which Washington foresaw as likely to array
+the East against the West--the Atlantic States against the inland
+States, and it is calculated by some sanguine people that before this
+century is over there will be eighteen, or possibly twenty, States
+admitted into the Union formed out of the Territories which are now
+under the central Government at Washington. Upon such influences as
+these alien immigration may be expected to act with prodigious power.
+At a recent meeting in Springfield a clergyman gave as an illustration
+of the absolute indifference of the foreign immigrants to Republican
+institutions a conversation he had with a Norwegian minister in
+Minneapolis. "There is nothing," said this gentleman, "in America which
+we Norwegians regard as of value except your land and your money. We
+do not want to learn English: we do not want to know the Americans
+around us; we have certainly no notion of becoming Americans, but we
+intend to remain as we are--Norwegians." The Mormons control Utah. They
+boast that they will soon govern five of the most important territorial
+regions beyond the Rockies. But if Utah becomes a State, as she hopes
+to do, she will found a Mormon code of laws and institutions beyond the
+power of the United States to control. New Mexico may be considered as
+a Roman Catholic State under the control of an excellent archbishop. Of
+course all prophecies may be falsified by events, but judging by the
+eighty years which have elapsed of the present century, and from the
+ratio of increase in that time in the United States, the most liberal
+construction may be placed even upon the bounding estimates of American
+politicians and statists. When we look to the Far West and see, for
+instance, how Winnipeg has become the centre of a great network of
+river navigation, 300 miles in one direction, 600 miles in another,
+and that the Mackenzie River passes for 1200 miles through what is
+declared to be the future wheat region of the world, we may easily
+comprehend the anxiety with which the patriotic American is filled lest
+the future of such a State should fall into hands antagonistic to the
+principles in which his _beau ideal_ of government has been founded and
+has prospered.
+
+_June 14._--At Lamy, a station named after the good archbishop of Santa
+Fe, where we halted for a short time whilst the passengers of another
+train were breakfasting, a citizen came up to me on the platform and
+exclaimed, as if he were very much impressed by the news he was going
+to give, "If you look in there, sir, you will see Bob Ingersoll at
+breakfast!" I asked whether there was anything very remarkable about
+the fact. "Well, sir," he said, "he is Colonel Ingersoll, of whom you
+have heard. He is the most remarkable in-fidel in the United States,
+and I really think he believes what he preaches. A good man to look at,
+too, and, they say, first-rate in his family." I had a glance at the
+believer in unbelief, and saw a very presentable-looking person, of
+fine appearance and good features, busily engaged in making the most
+of his time at one of the tables in the refreshment-room. He was the
+observed of all observers, and appeared to like it; and I understood
+from one of the crowd that he had just returned from inspecting some
+mining ventures in which he was concerned; for, if he does not believe
+in the world to come, he is credited with very strong faith in the
+excellencies of the possession of wealth in the world that is. His
+lectures are attended by crowded audiences, but, as an astute American
+observed, "they won't come to much, for, after all, people who do
+not believe anything can never get up a great enthusiasm. It is in
+believing something that the populace has faith."
+
+Once more our eyes were rejoiced with the sight of the lovely plains
+of Las Vegas, wide-spreading fields decked with flowers and dotted with
+flocks, bordered with ranges of softly contoured mountains, the courses
+of the water streams indicated by bright vegetation and by growth of
+trees of many kinds. From Lamy (170 miles) there is a gradual rise to
+Raton, which we reached at 6.30 in the evening. The appearance of the
+region we traverse as the train approaches the Raton Pass presents
+a strong contrast to the desolate country through which we have been
+passing. From Raton the train was drawn by two engines in front and
+shoved by one behind, and even then the pace was not very rapid, for
+the ascent is very sharp. All the more could we enjoy a very glorious
+sunset, as we slowly ascended the mountain. Then darkness came on
+rapidly, and we slid down towards La Junta into the night, and were all
+fast asleep long before we arrived there. In the very early morning,
+on June 15th, some two hours after midnight, we halted for a time at
+Pueblo. At 9 o'clock we had to leave our beloved Pullman and change the
+cars, for we were to take a fresh point of departure, starting from
+the Union Depot upon the Denver and Rio Grande narrow-gauge railway
+for Denver, 119 miles distant, and making an excursion on the way to
+Manitou, to which we diverged from Colorado Springs: for to go within
+reach of that famous resort and not to see it would have been a great
+outrage on all the rules and regulations established for the observance
+of travellers. Certes narrow-gauge railways need an apology. Their
+_raison d'etre_ is, at the best, that they are better than nothing.
+"If you won't have us, you can have nothing else." And in such a
+mountainous region as we were about to visit, the difficulties and
+expense connected with a broad-gauge line would have been enormous,
+if indeed it could be constructed at all. The narrow-gauge carriages,
+with seats to match, with which we were made acquainted for the first
+time, were of course much less commodious and comfortable than those
+we had quitted, but far superior to those on the Indian lines of the
+same gauge, and Indian engineers had been over to take a lesson from
+the Americans for the use of their carriage-builders. Atchison, Topeka,
+and Santa Fe Company and Denver and Rio Grande Company have been at
+daggers drawn and pistols cocked--ay, and fired--and at battles waged,
+in times gone by; and now our friends on the former line were, like
+ourselves, the guests of the latter, which was represented by several
+official gentlemen anxious to do the honours to the Duke. The scenery
+becomes grander and wilder every mile as the special hurries on as
+well as it can over the sinuous line, which is piercing a mountain
+region savage and sterile, and climbing by the sides of ravines and
+creeping upwards in rocky valleys with pine-clad hill-tops and frowning
+cliffs above. The engineer who designed the line is a Scotchman named
+McMurtrie--or at least of recent Scotch origin--and he seems to have a
+special gift for such aspiring work, and a gradient-compelling genius
+not to be baffled by altitudes. We were mounting towards the snows.
+Range upon range of whitened summits and hoary ridges came in view,
+all paying homage to the rugged crown of Pike's Peak, which can be
+seen from points more than 140 miles away. The fleecy cloudland which
+seemed to lie before us, as we looked away from Pueblo, was resolving
+itself into savage alps. And in these passes, which the eye caught for
+a moment, there might be El Dorados still undiscovered, for around us
+were cities springing out of the desert. Here the enchanter's wand is
+the explorer's pick, and no one could say where the precious ore might
+not be awaiting its touch. We were coming to the Land of Promises. The
+conversation of our new friends, among whom were some gentlemen of the
+press, related mostly to mines, and one of them had, as we discovered,
+a very certain investment at the disposal of the Duke, in the form of a
+mining-claim, which was worth, at the lowest computation, twice as much
+as he was willing to take for it. There was no reason to doubt his good
+faith, but it was felt that it was a kind of fortune which ought not to
+pass into the hands of strangers, and should be reserved for the people
+of the country; and I am sure all of the party who had the pleasure of
+the owner's acquaintance hope that he has "made his pile" out of it,
+and has more than realised his expectations.
+
+Colorado Springs, forty-five miles from Pueblo, is nearly 6000 feet
+above the level of the sea. The character of the line to it is best
+described in the fact that the average grade per mile is 44.14, the
+maximum curvature 6 deg. There are "no Springs" here, but the little town,
+charmingly situated, is a halting-place much frequented in tourist-time
+by travellers, and reputed to be healthful. There are some pleasant
+houses visible from the station, at which we descended to take our
+places in the carriages provided to take us to Manitou Springs, five
+miles away. Mr. Palmer--if General, I beg his pardon--the President of
+the Railroad, had important business to attend to, but he was so well
+represented by Mr. Bell, the Vice-President, that no one regretted his
+absence, and it cannot be said in his case _les absents ont toujours
+tort_. He is reported to have made a very large fortune with much
+ingenuity, and to have business talents which even in this country
+excite admiration. Mr. Bell is an Irish gentleman, a member of the
+medical profession, who has a delightful villa embowered in a garden
+in the environs of Manitou, where the Duke and his friends found a
+charming interior and an Irish-American welcome, and discovered that
+strawberries and cream were almost as good in Colorado as in Covent
+Garden. A quaint, odd place, Manitou--an American Martigny, with
+Pike's Peak rising (14,300 feet above the sea) over it in the clear
+sky, inspiring regret that we could not make the excursion to the
+summit, which is rewarded, we were told, and I can believe, by one of
+the grandest views in the world--the usual service of guides, horses,
+and mules, and _caleches_--a naturalist's store with skins, minerals,
+feathers, and stuffed "objects"--detached wooden houses and villas
+in small plots of garden--a straggling street, and large hotels for
+invalids. But there was the unusual feature of encampments here and
+there by the roadside, and notices forbidding the pitching of tents
+within certain limits which were explained by the fact that the high
+reputation of the waters and air induces people to come from great
+distances for the treatment of consumption, and diseases of throat and
+lungs. Many of them find it cheaper to travel in horse waggons and
+pitch their canvas dwellings when they wish to make a halt, than to
+take up their quarters at hotels. Poor people! what pale, hectic cheeks
+and wasted forms we saw; little groups picnicking by the sides of the
+rivulets along the roads--each with a gnawing care--anxiety about some
+dear one's health in the midst of them. Our driver, an intelligent,
+chatty lad, was full of information, and we had to drive the prescribed
+road by the wells out to the Ute Pass, a mountain-gorge wild enough--a
+small _Tete Noire_--to points to which magniloquent names have been
+given.
+
+It is not for want of what is called puffing that Americans neglect
+the resorts of health of their own country, and in the States far and
+wide the beauties and advantages of Manitou are blazoned forth on the
+walls of hotels and in guide-books to all who can read. I may confess
+now that, notwithstanding the magnificent altitude of Pike's Peak, and
+the eccentric forms of the rocks in the "Garden of the Gods," I was
+disappointed with Manitou. But then the visit was short, and the day
+was hot, and the way was long and dusty, and haply it might be that
+under different circumstances Manitou would deserve much warmer praise.
+It possesses indeed an abundance of curious springs, said to be full
+of health-giving properties; and in the course of our drive we halted
+several times to partake of drinks from various springs, out of one of
+which bubbled up very good soda-water, precisely like Schweppe's best
+in taste and appearance. At the large hotel, which put one in mind of
+the great establishments of the same sort in Switzerland, the water
+served at table to the guests--a sort of pleasant Apollinaris-tasting
+beverage--came from a natural fountain.
+
+The "cataract" nearly made us angry, and there was no regret felt when
+the carriages returned to the hotel, where there was unwonted activity
+and bustle, as the "Denver Zouaves" had just descended in a friendly
+razzia on it, and were desolating the hearts and fireside resources of
+Manitou. The consequences might have been serious, as it turned out,
+to unoffending strangers. Those who needed it turned into the barber's
+shop of the hotel to be shaved, and after some delay a coloured man
+appeared, who began to try his hand on me. Fortunately it was not
+'prentice, for it was very unsteady, and I became a little alarmed
+for my cuticle. "It will be all right, mister," quoth the barber. "I
+never cut any one. But I'm demoralised, dat's a fact, having to wait
+on dem Denver Zouaves. Lor a messy on any enemy dey has! My nerve's
+all gone to pieces wid their wantin' everting at once at the dinner!"
+The hotel seemed far more clean and comfortable than the caravanserais
+in the land of William Tell; but our stay was short, for we were put
+under orders for a sight which has the most inappropriate name that
+could be invented--a valley in which the most extraordinary-looking
+columns carved out in a plateau by the agency of water, have been
+left standing, detached and in groups, to which the visitor enters
+through a cleft in a barrier of rock passing round the base of a pillar
+of sandstone as high as a house. The "Garden of the Gods" contains
+500 acres, and is surrounded by mountains and cliffs. The sandstone
+pillars generally taper from the base upwards to a short distance from
+the tops, which are flattened out or surmounted by slabs or blocks of
+sandstone of fantastic outline, and they are called by names derived
+from fancied likenesses to animals, birds, and men. The juxtaposition
+of the most brilliantly hued, dazzling-red blocks and strata, with
+masses of the same material of milky whiteness, gives the impression
+that the scene is the work of human hands; it seems too quaint and
+artificial for the hand of Nature, to which alone it is due; and the
+vegetation and the trees are in keeping with the character of the
+place. A trysting-place for geologists, and their happy hunting-ground,
+no doubt. But why "the Garden of the Gods," I pray?
+
+From the valley or cup, emerging by another road, the driver took us to
+a ravine-like recess, almost girt in by high wooded mountains, in which
+Mr. (General?) Palmer is erecting a mansion of palatial importance--a
+picturesque site surely--cliffs, forests, and mountain all around, and
+in view one most singular sandstone pillar, named the Major Domo, 120
+feet high and only 30 feet round--a mountain stream brawling through
+tangled brushwood glades--a garden. But the heat! That must prove a
+terror by day to the inmates of Glen Eyrie Lodge or Castle--which, by
+the by, was named, as one of us insisted, from a collection of rubbish
+on a ledge in the face of one of the cliffs, which was, he maintained,
+the nest of an eagle. It was now time to return to our train, and we
+were not sorry to get back to Colorado Springs.
+
+From Colorado Springs to our destination at Denver there were still 75
+miles of rail, and the line continued to ascend till we reached Divide
+(7186 feet), whence there was a gentle descent. There were sixteen
+stations named on the time-table. We stopped at very few of them,
+and travelled somewhat too fast to permit our placid enjoyment of the
+scenery, austere and vast, which indeed deserved more attention than
+could be given to it by passengers in a very lively train--endless
+alps on alps, not sheeted with perpetual white, but rather flecked
+with snowfields, which contrasted finely with the sombre pine-forests,
+and the rich hues of the rocks, touched by the rays of the setting
+sun, that, ere it slid behind the mountains, cast a rose-coloured
+mantle on their summit. The evidences of a bustling city were not
+wanting in the approaches to the capital of Colorado. There were tall
+chimneys vomiting out smoke in the distance, and near at hand trains
+of waggons were toiling over the dusty plain--still 5000 feet above
+the sea-level--fast trotters and people on horseback, beer-gardens,
+factories of all kinds, brick-kilns, and then a fringe of log houses
+and wooden shanties, before the train stopped at the imposing and
+substantial depot.
+
+It was a quarter-past eight, nearly dark, when we reached Denver,
+and glad were we to get into the hall of the Windsor Hotel, which was
+crowded with a mixed multitude--miners, and speculators, and traders,
+and some travellers like ourselves--a very busy scene indeed. In the
+hotel were all human comforts nearly; hot and cold baths, and good
+rooms, and more appliances of civilised existence, for those who could
+pay for them, than could be found in many hostelries of approved
+reputation in venerable towns at home; moreover, exuberant offers
+of help and information. One goes to bed laden with obligations and
+heavy with the sense of favours which can never be repaid. There was
+now a _soupcon_ of frost in the air, and notwithstanding the heat
+which we had endured the greater part of the day, fires were not
+ungrateful; and as we peered out of our windows over the roofs of the
+wide-spread houses of the town, we could see the snow on the lofty
+ranges of hills, watered by the South Platte River and Cherry Creek,
+which surround the cup in which Denver has been built in obedience
+to the impulses of the increasing population, which now numbers, I
+believe, 38,000 souls. There was a bright glare from the gas-lighted
+streets, sounds of music, and a tumult of life in the town which
+would have been creditable to an ancient metropolis. In the morning
+from the hotel windows appeared a beautiful and widespread panorama
+of the hills we had seen the evening before, peak above peak, none
+very densely covered perhaps, or presenting continuous snowfields, but
+extending in billowy sweeps far away to the horizon, all capped with
+snow, now bathed in a flood of fervent sunshine, the snow lighted up
+by the peculiar crimson tints common in Alpine regions. There were
+duties in the way of sight-seeing and exploration of no ordinary
+nature to be done. First there were interviews and receptions, and the
+inevitable drive through the place as soon as the ordeal of breakfast
+was over; and ordeal in some sort it was for the strangers to file
+in to the public room and take their places at their table, aware
+that the morning papers had subjected them to exhaustive criticism,
+which was being verified by those around us. The morning papers too
+had given some topics for reflection, indications that in the newly
+created capital of Colorado desperate men, overtaken by the march of
+law and order, had refused to accept service, and were vindicating
+their rights as wild western outcasts to take or part with life as
+of yore, in reckless encounters and deliberate assassinations. There
+were, perhaps, at that moment some hundreds, if not thousands, out of
+the population of 37,000 or 38,000 of the city, who belonged to the
+adventurous classes--sporting-men, betting-men, ring-men, bar-keepers,
+hell-proprietors, and their satellites, and the scum of the saloons
+attracted from the great cities of the States for hundreds of miles,
+by the prey which miners with belts full of gold, half mad with drink,
+and always fond of excitement, frequently are; and if to these be added
+the dissolute loafers and broken-down mining speculators, the strength
+of the army arrayed against the law may be estimated; and the wonder is
+that among a population armed to the teeth there are not more cases of
+such violent deeds as we were reading of at breakfast. To the stranger
+there was no evidence of the existence of these disturbing elements,
+unless the bearded and booted men with speculation in their eyes,
+in the hotel passages and halls, belonged to the dangerous, as they
+certainly did to the mining, classes. As to the resources of the city,
+although for rapidity of growth its wonders may be eclipsed by those of
+Leadville, Denver claims a very high place in the catalogue of these
+marvellous fungi of civilisation, of which the Western States present
+almost unique examples. There is everything that any one can want to be
+had for money in the place, and much more than most people need. Paris
+fashions and millinery are in vogue. There are fine shops, handsome
+churches, a theatre, breweries, factories, banks, insurance offices.
+
+The principal street exhibits pretty young people, who would have
+no occasion to fear comparison with the _beau monde_ in Eastern
+or European capitals. The thoroughfares are crowded with vehicles,
+and spruce carriages and well turned-out horses may be seen in the
+favourite drive, that has been made over an indifferent road to the
+base of the Rocky Mountains, which appear to be close at hand, though
+they are thirteen miles away. But here and there in the well-dressed
+crowd may be seen a Bohemian _pur sang_, or a miner in his every day
+clothes, bent on a rig out and a good time of it. The streets, unpaved,
+dusty, and rugged, are very wide, and bordered with trees, and the
+houses generally are built of good red brick instead of wood; and
+there are runnels of water like those one sees in Pretoria and other
+Dutch towns in South Africa. The roads about the city leave much to be
+desired; but Rome was not built in a day.
+
+There are many ready-made clothing establishments in the main streets,
+and there is a heavy trade in tinned provisions. Through the Western
+States, as in South Africa, the debris of provision-tins constitutes
+a certain and considerable addition to the objects to be seen in the
+vicinity of every house, and to the mounds of rubbish in the street of
+every village. How indeed could the first-comers in such regions keep
+body and soul together without the supplies in such a portable form
+of the first necessaries of life? Having once run up a town in these
+remote wastes, the inhabitants are still compelled to make a liberal
+use of the same sort of food, and mines of tinned iron gradually
+accumulate around them.
+
+Our first excursion was to the Argo Works, under very pleasant
+auspices, for we had the wife of the Senator, who is one of the
+principal partners, and Mrs. Pearce, whose husband is largely
+interested in the works, taking charge of us. The works are at some
+distance outside the town, but the lofty chimneys vomit out quite
+sufficient vaporous fumes and smoke to blight the vegetation and to
+give the people near at hand a taste of their quality. I am not going
+to give a minute description, for more reasons than one, of what we saw
+at the works; but it was a very interesting exhibition of the processes
+by which the precious metals are extracted from the ores and delivered
+to commerce. The Argo Works simply assay and reduce ores on commission,
+but the business is on a very large scale. Immense piles, in fact small
+mountains, of brown, cinnamon and earth coloured dust and rock were
+heaped up in the sheds, to be brought to the furnaces and turned, when
+divested of the lead, iron, copper, and gold, out in ingots of silver.
+All the methods for the extraction of silver were shown to us, but
+I committed a gross indiscretion when I asked, in my ignorance, "How
+do you extract the gold?" "That," said the urbane gentleman who was
+conducting us over the works, "we never permit strangers to see." So
+there is more there than meets the eye.
+
+The business of assaying here must be profitable, and if the reputation
+of any firm be once established there is a secure fortune for its
+members. The miners flock to them, and they can dictate terms. The
+extent of mining work in the country around may be inferred from the
+numerous offices in connection with it in the city. As a specimen
+of what Messrs. Bush and Tabor of our hotel give their guests for
+dinner, let me offer you this _menu_ of the 5.30 ordinary to-day
+(June 16). Soup, beef a l'Anglaise; fish, boiled trout, anchovy sauce;
+corned beef, leg of mutton, sirloin beef, chickens with giblet sauce,
+fricassee a la Toulouse, veal, kidneys sautes aux croutons, rice,
+croquettes, baked pork and beans, saddle of antelope, currant jelly,
+lamb, tongue, chicken salad, spiced salmon; innumerable "relishes" and
+vegetables, baked rice pudding, strawberry pie, apricot pie, jelly,
+blancmange, vanilla ice cream, macaroons, pound cake, fruit, Swiss
+cheese, nuts, coffee, &c. The wines were not cheap: champagne 16_s._ a
+bottle, St. Julien 6_s._, Leoville 14_s._, sherry 8_s._, brandy 14_s._
+per bottle. Orders for "drinks" at the bar after dinner were much more
+general than orders for wine at dinner.
+
+Denver, in spite of its mineral wealth, is very poor, however, in
+that of which the want would make life, even in America, intolerable.
+The supply of drinking-water is scanty and bad, and last year there
+was nearly a water famine. The _cartes_ in the hotel announced "Water
+used in this room is boiled and filtered." But great efforts have been
+made to furnish the inhabitants with a store, constant and adequate,
+of the precious fluid, and we saw very considerable works, the
+property of an Irish gentleman, erected before the town attained its
+present dimensions, which were to be supplemented by a new enterprise
+respecting which we heard much. Perhaps no town of equal size in an
+equal length of time has ever had so much money and money's worth
+flowing in and through it as Denver since the Colorado mines were
+worked. It is asserted that the trade of the town for 1881 will exceed
+8,000,000_l._ Colorado in 1879 yielded ores to the value of more than
+3,750,000_l._ The output in the present year will exceed that of 1880.
+In that year $35,417,517 worth of gold and $20,183,889 of silver (more
+than 11,000,000_l._) was deposited in the United States Mint and Assay
+Office. There is, besides, vast wealth in flocks and herds, and Denver
+is the place where the people resort from Colorado for purposes of
+trade and pleasure; altogether an astounding place, with a future quite
+dazzling to think of, unless the mines give in, and even then Colorado
+cannot again be poor; its climate and scenery will always attract
+travellers, and its capacity for feeding sheep and cattle will secure
+its population. "And as to the beetle?" Why, no one would have anything
+to say to it. Nothing was known of it. There might be such things in
+other States. "And the name?" Probably it was a red-coloured bug, and
+got the name Colorado just as the river, or tobacco, was called, from
+the hue of it. At all events the bug did not belong to the State.
+
+The interest which the progress of Colorado and the condition of
+society in the State excite was exemplified by the appearance in
+Denver of a party of Hungarian noblemen, whose names gave occasion
+for stumbling to the journalists who copied them out of the Hotel
+Register--Count Andrassy and others, who were travelling under the
+guidance of Dr. Rudolf Meyer, of Vienna. Although the air of Denver
+is so much bepraised, it happens that most of our party felt rather
+overcome at the end of our excursion through the town and the visit
+to the smelting works, and one of the Hungarians was confined to his
+room. However, they sallied out before dinner, and a gloomy prophet
+of evil remarked, "If these strangers should have a difficulty, I
+consider they'll hev only theirselves to blame. Some citizens don't
+like strangers comin' in and starin' at them, and they're apt to be
+awkward in their tempers in the afternoon." Knowing no danger, and
+fearing none, they went off, and were a long time absent. Meantime we
+were preparing for the road, as we were bound for Leadville, the city
+of the "biggest boom" of mining times--"the Silver El Dorado," as the
+guide-book, with a magnificent "bull," describes it. Our Hungarian
+friends returned to the hotel ere we left. They were filled with
+enthusiasm, and with a good deal also of curiosity in regard to the
+shootings of which they had heard so much, and were following in our
+track next day, and so we parted _sans adieux_. How the love of gold
+has filled these lone valleys with desperate men! "They are a rough
+lot, sure enough," said the landlord, "but lynching keeps them down;
+and it is much better than hanging according to law, to my mind. It
+certainly is cheaper." "How is it cheaper?" "Why," said he, "when a man
+is prosecuted, or when he is tried before the judges, the law expenses
+are heavy, and they fall on the county. When a man is lynched there is
+only the expense of the rope, and a little loss of time for the boys
+who do the job." From Denver to Pueblo and from Pueblo to Leadville
+the line is on the narrow-gauge principle, and our train, which left
+at seven o'clock in the evening, seemed to be driven on no principle at
+all; for, anxious to astonish a Duke perhaps, or Britishers generally,
+the driver did what certainly could not be called his level best to
+send us along up and down a very rough line, and round the sharpest
+curves, at the rate of forty miles an hour, so that when we turned
+in, our rest, if rest at all it were, was exceedingly broken, and
+we trundled about in our berths as if we were in a ship in a pretty
+heavy sea. Still this narrow-gauge was the only line which could be
+made through such a country as we were traversing. Peeps out of the
+window ever and anon revealed, high up amongst the stars, rugged
+mountain-tops, and for ever there came the sound of rushing water,
+near or remote, as the train "bounded" on its course. I do not know
+what stations we passed on our way, but the night was very long, and
+I greeted with pleasure the first gleam of light above the hill-tops.
+The Arkansas River was on our left, and at dawn we had glimpses of
+its turbid stream running madly in deep gorges far below us. At the
+South Arkansas station the train halted soon after daybreak, and then
+we diverged from the main line, and a light train took us over the
+Arkansas River by a fine bridge on its way up the Gunnison Extension
+to visit the highest mountain-pass traversed by a railway in the
+world. South Arkansas station is 217 miles from Denver, and is 6944
+feet--and Marshall Pass (25 miles away), to which we were bound, is
+10,760 feet--above sea-level. There were grades of 211 and curves of
+24 deg. on the way, and the railroad twisted in and out among the ravines
+like an iron Alexandrine, for ever ascending till we had passed the
+limits of forest life. There were stations at short intervals--Poncha
+Springs, Mears, Silver Creek--from each other. From the stations there
+is a good deal of cross-country traffic, and at one place we saw three
+stages laden with men and women--or rather, to be polite and accurate,
+let me say with women and ladies--starting, one with six horses, and
+the other two with four each. These were bound for Gunnison, and as
+we were halting for a little, the Duke and some others got out of the
+train, and sauntered up towards the wooden shanties which formed "the
+town," consisting of the usual array of saloons and drinking places.
+However, our course was cut short by the information vouchsafed by one
+of the officials, that it might be as well not to go up, as there had
+been a big shooting match that morning, and that one man was killed
+and four had been wounded, "and some of them were on the drink yet."
+From 4.30 A.M. to 6.45 A.M. we struggled up towards the pass till
+the line came to an end near the summit, and we were rewarded by some
+very fine views, exceedingly like those of the Mont Cenis Railway or
+the Soemmering. The hills on both sides of the line were stippled and
+flaked with snow, but there was no extensive field, so far as the eye
+could see, nor was there any appearance whatever of a glacier, the tops
+generally being clear of snow, which only lodged in the ravines and
+hollows. Strange it was in these alpine heights to hear the clang of
+Italian tongues; but most of the navvies were from Italy, and if not
+quite so strong as English or Americans, they were in more favour with
+contractors, because they did more work, owing to their steadiness and
+sobriety. The line was being pushed on at an astonishing rate, and one
+man was pointed out to us who had laid four and a half miles of railway
+in one day, "the biggest thing of the kind ever done." Our enjoyment
+of the scenery was very much diminished by our animal appetites,
+stimulated by the sharp mountain air, which craved incessantly for
+food. But not even a cup of coffee was to be had until we got back to
+the South Arkansas station, late in the morning, where an excellent
+breakfast awaited us. Here we were detained some time by a derailment
+of an engine in front.
+
+From South Arkansas station to Leadville (61 miles) the railroad is
+still more aspiring. The higher we ascend the less striking are the
+scenic effects, but the grades are not very severe till we come to
+Malta, where it reaches 130; from Hilliers to Leadville the maximum is
+176, the curves being often 15 deg. The general character of the country
+may be conceived from these figures, but no words can convey any idea
+of the wholesale destruction of timber which has marked the progress
+of the explorers and prospectors. Where the axe was weary the blaze
+and the fire were called in, and hundreds of miles of forest are laid
+in blackened ruin. At last we are on a level with the hill-tops.
+There, on the hill-tops and in the valleys of a sterile region in
+front of you, amidst those tall chimneys vomiting out smoke and steam,
+is a wilderness of wooden huts, "the Great Carbonate Camp"--where we
+leave the train--spread out over an undulating plateau, broken into
+mound-like hills and sharp hillocks--bustling streets filled with the
+most remarkable swarm of all nations that ever settled on any one spot
+in the world. The story of Leadville reads like a chapter out of some
+book of Oriental fable. It is a huge barrack of wooden houses, with
+some solid and important buildings, with masses of tree-stumps cropping
+up in the centre of the main thoroughfares, pitched over an undulating,
+rugged, dusty ledge. In the midst of blocks of houses sprout up the
+chimneys of furnaces and mining works, the clang of machinery fills
+the air, which is thick with clouds of dust. It was a few years ago an
+utterly wild, lifeless waste amidst the mountains covered with forests,
+when three brothers, named Gallagher, exploring from California, were
+led by some genius, good or bad, to test the material of the rocks in
+the ravine. They struck gold ore, and silver too, and they set up a
+claim; and presently they sold their shares in the land which they had
+appropriated, for 40,000_l._, which they divided. Two used their wealth
+wisely, and made more of it, and, taking to themselves the members of
+the family, throve exceedingly; one, not so wise, if he were quite as
+good, did not prosper as well as his brothers. But the scene of their
+operations was soon swarming with enterprising miners. There was a
+mighty "boom." Now there is a city! Leadville is, I think, the most
+astonishing city on earth, but I am not by any means inclined to say
+that it is a place I should like to be astonished about for more than
+a few hours.
+
+The party drove to the Morning Star, said to be the best mine in
+Leadville; and the Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry Green, and others, went
+down the mine in miners' clothes or cloaks. Two others, whose names I
+shall not give, remained above, and had, I fancy, the best of the time.
+Afterwards we visited Grant's Smelting Works, and then back to the
+Clarence Hotel and dined, strolling out afterwards through the town and
+visiting the billiard saloons, the Grand Central Theatre, and finally,
+where we were told Leadville life was to be seen in all its glory, the
+faro and the kino tables, which, however, were doing but very little
+business, as it was not until after midnight that play in the town
+generally commenced. Instead of sleeping at the hotel, we resolved
+to take refuge in the train, which was drawn up at the siding; and we
+had to drive in order to reach it, as it was considered unsafe to walk
+through the streets in the dark.
+
+We started at four o'clock next morning, June 18th, and on arriving
+at Arkansas Station learned that an engine was off the line in front
+of us. Breakdown gangs were sent for, and all the locomotive talent
+amongst our passengers repaired quickly to the scene. As it was not
+easy to lift the engine, the engineers adopted the expedient of laying
+a temporary rail to turn its flank so as to enable us to pass round
+it, which we did after a delay of about an hour. The Duke got out and
+sat on the cow-catcher by way of a change. But the interest we took in
+the scenery was somewhat diminished by the intelligence that the delay
+caused by the engine would prevent our enjoying the "soda bath" we had
+been promised at Canyon City, and the sight of the State Prison, where
+murderers were to be paraded by the dozen. About twenty miles north
+of the Grand Canyon, the gorges through which the river runs became
+wider and deeper. All that has been written about the Grand Canyon
+utterly fails to convey an adequate idea of its exceeding grandeur
+and wildness. The rocks--closing in so that the spectator in the car,
+looking forward, thinks the progress of the train must be arrested,
+and that it is not possible for it to get out of the _cul de sac_ which
+appears in front, rising aloft for upwards of two thousand five hundred
+feet on each side--are coloured with the brightest hues, and present an
+infinite variety of form. The impetuous current of the Arkansas River,
+contracted at times to the breadth of some twenty or thirty yards,
+and penned into a space in which the waters boil and toss as if about
+to leap on and submerge the passing cars, roars wildly down below on
+our right at a depth varying as the line rises and falls. But it is
+at the Bridge--a triumph of engineering skill--that the horrors of
+the pass culminate. The sides of the ravine approach so near that the
+daring engineer was enabled to execute the idea of lowering from above
+a [**triangle]-shaped frame or trestle of iron; and, the ends catching
+on each side of the gorge, permitted him to work on it for the
+construction of the iron platform over which the train is carried at a
+height of some hundreds of feet right over the maddened river. You can
+look down through the interstices of the girders and glance shudderingly
+at the hell of waters below--a sight and sensation never to be
+forgotten. The ravine gradually expands and the cliffs recede as the
+line strikes eastwards; and though the scenery retains a wild and
+savage character for many miles farther, the impressions of the Grand
+Canyon caused us to regard it with comparative indifference. We heard
+many tales of the great railway war which was waged for the possession
+of the pass, of which traces still remained in the ruins of posts of
+vantage and observation, and the works of the defeated railroad
+visible on the other side of the ravine. At night we reached Pueblo
+and took up our quarters in our own cars, and continued our journey,
+after some delay, towards Kansas City.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+KANSAS TO ST. LOUIS.
+
+ Liquor Law--Kansas Academy of Science--An Incident of Travel--A
+ Parting Symposium--Life in the Cars--St. Louis to New York.
+
+
+_June 19th._--Still on the rolling prairies; in the country of
+compulsory abstinence--the paradise of Sir Wilfred Lawson. At 9.30
+A.M. the train stopped at Newton, 431 miles from Pueblo, and 281 from
+Kansas.
+
+Here a phenomenon--there was a man by the road side who walked with
+unsteady step, whose legs tottered, and who lurched violently as he
+came down the road at that early hour. "He is a sick man," observed
+one of my friends in the train; "that gentleman has been taking
+_medicine_." In the Kansas Act there is a clause enabling physicians,
+in case of need, to order stimulants for the patients without penalty;
+but I am told the doctors have generally refused to act upon that
+permission, so I suppose our friend had been consulting an unlicensed
+practitioner.
+
+It would be ill done, when I am anxious to acknowledge the pleasure
+and profit which I derived from my passage through the State, if I
+did not record the satisfaction with which I perused a volume of the
+"Transactions of the Kansas Academy of Science," which by accident I
+picked up at one of the stations. The very name speaks trumpet-tongued
+for the progress which has been made in this wild region. The year
+before last, the twelfth annual meeting of the Academy was held in
+Topeka, and I find amongst the list of papers read such subjects
+as these:--The Kansas Lepidoptera; Kansas Minerals; the Mounds of
+Southern Kansas; Recent additions to Kansas Plants; Kansas Botany;
+Kansas Meteorites; Phonetic representations of Indian Language;
+Sinkholes; Elementary Sounds of Language; Mound-builders; On Recent
+Indian Discoveries. And among the lecturers there was Professor B.
+F. Mudge, who died last year, whose name probably is known to a very
+limited number of scientific men outside the University of Kansas.
+Generally the papers contributed by the gentlemen of the State attest
+industry and attainments which make their praise of the Professor
+particularly valuable. It is curious enough to pick up in a railway
+carriage, traversing such a scene of comparative wildness and vast
+uninhabited plains in Western Kansas, an exceedingly interesting
+examination of the Helmholtz theories of sight. The object of the
+lecturer would scarcely be suspected by the reader. We had already
+been struck by the extraordinary absence of signalmen, or of any
+of the complex apparatus of men and machinery which may be seen in
+Europe, and notably in England, to report the progress of trains
+on the lines. Collisions, however, occur in America where these
+precautions are not taken, and the lecturer attributed a good deal of
+these accidents to colour-blindness, which appears to have attracted
+considerable attention in the United States. Surgeons, pilots, &c.,
+are tested for colour, and in the army colour-blindness disqualifies
+the recruit for employment in the signal corps. Altogether the papers
+give an impression that in this new State there are diligent students
+of natural history and physics, and profound inquirers into all the
+phenomena of life. There was a reverse to the medal.
+
+At a station where the train halted beyond Pueblo, a card was handed
+to me by one of the stewards. "The gentleman is, as he seemed very
+pressing, outside; but I told him you were engaged." I started
+as I read the name and address on the card, as well I might. They
+indicated that an old friend whom I had left in a condition of great
+bodily weakness and infirmity in London, was close at hand in this
+remote region--a wonderful if welcome fly in amber. I ran out of the
+drawing-room into the next car, and there saw a man, agitated and
+travel-worn, whom I had never, to the best of my belief, seen in my
+life before. His story was told, if not soon, at least in time to
+let me partly understand the situation ere the train moved off. The
+stranger had been in the service of the gentleman whose card he sent in
+to me, but had left it to better himself in America, and had gone out
+as valet to an American of good position at Colorado Springs. He found,
+however, according to his own account, that he was expected to do
+things not required of a valet in his own country, such as lumbering,
+wood-cutting, and the like, and so he had thrown up his situation
+and was going back to England. He had had quite enough of Colorado
+Springs. "I was not there above a month, and I was shot at twice," he
+said. "Once because I made some remark in a bar-room, where a chap was
+abusing Englishmen; and another time while I was speaking in the street
+to a man a fellow had a grudge against. He fired at him across the
+road, and the ball whistled within a hair's-breadth of my head." He had
+arrived at Pueblo some time before our special, and as the morning was
+warm, he walked into a bar near the platform, while the engine of his
+train was watering, to get a glass of lemonade. As he was drinking it,
+a man walked in and called for a glass of whisky, putting down, at the
+same time, what seemed to be a bank note, on the counter. The boniface
+said, "I haven't got change for this twenty-dollar bill--perhaps this
+gentleman can oblige you." The unsuspecting Briton, who had put the
+money for his passage to Liverpool in a purse, drew it out to change
+the note, and the strange customer at once seized it from his hand,
+and rushed off towards the street with his booty. The Britisher ran
+after him, but checked his wild career when he saw, within an inch of
+his head, the muzzle of a revolver which the robber had drawn, and the
+fellow vanished. "Won't you help me to stop the thief; you see what has
+happened?" exclaimed the victim turning to the barman. "I guess there
+was no money in that purse, sir. And if there was, perhaps you had no
+more right to it than he had." Then the Briton dashed off after Don
+Guzman, shouting "police," and was at once accosted by an officer of
+the Pueblo force. He hurriedly stated the facts. The policeman smiled.
+"I think you won't see that pile agin," he remarked; "and if you
+don't look sharp ye'll miss yer train, that's a fact!" The man had his
+railway ticket all right, a few dollars in his pocket, and I told him
+I would see him and get him a passage, if I found on inquiry his story
+was true. My companions thought the tale suspicious--but I believe it
+was true, and I subsequently franked the man to England.
+
+Now here we had an exemplification of the manners and customs of
+the district. Such an act of violence and robbery might occur in
+London--anywhere. But what of the apathy, or perhaps complicity, of the
+bar man? And if it or they be considered not altogether abnormal, is
+the conduct of the policeman to be accepted as quite consistent with
+the discharge of a policeman's duty? Well, whilst I was pondering on
+these things, there came to me the best possible adviser--a judge in
+this Israel--our excellent Palinurus, Mr. White. He threw a new, if not
+a side light on the subject. "Depend on it he is a confidence man. The
+trains are full of them! Our conductors have express orders about the
+rascals." And he explained that a confidence man is a swindler--very
+often an Englishman, who makes it his business to look out for unwary
+strangers, on whom he imposes with some tale of distress, or some
+recital of imaginary misfortune and adventure. As the man I had seen
+was coming on in the train in our wake, Mr. White promised to talk with
+the conductor, and find out, if he could, the truth about the Pueblo
+robbery. Before dusk a telegram was forwarded by him to me from the
+station where he left us, to say that the conductor had no doubt the
+man was robbed, but that it was partly his own fault, and to warn me to
+be cautious in my dealings with him.
+
+We have now been travelling straight on end for 1160 miles, with only
+two engineers and two firemen and one engine, a feat of endurance
+which has greatly exercised the Duke of Sutherland, who, as a practical
+director of the London and North-Western Railway, has knowledge of such
+matters, and who contrasts the performance with the experience he has
+on the home lines, where engines, engineers, and firemen would have
+been relieved or laid up over and over again. The head engineer of the
+line, who joined us, Mr. Hackney, formerly of Congleton, had become
+accustomed to these journeyings and endurances, which were brought to
+the front in our conversation by the engine-driver appearing at the
+door of the carriage to claim a dollar which he had won from the Duke
+in a bet that he could not do the distance without laying up the engine
+for repairs.
+
+All the long Sabbath-day we travelled on through the prairie, catching
+glimpses now and then of wooden villages, around which trees were
+beginning to sprout up, and of the little churches with knots of carts,
+waggons, horses, and buggies outside, and people waiting for the end
+of the sermon. Now and then, perhaps at intervals of fifteen miles or
+so, are places of larger importance, such as Emporia, a rising city on
+the plains, where many steeples pointed aloft indicated considerable
+diversity of creed. An authority, not always to be relied upon, stated
+that there are fourteen churches belonging to the town.
+
+There was a parting symposium in the second Pullman ere we reached
+Topeka. Mr. White, Major Anderson, General Brown, Mr. Jerome, and
+my much wandering compatriot, a veritable Irish Ulysses, raised the
+tuneful melodies of the "Golden Slipper," the "Little Brown Jug," and
+the other tender psalmodies which had whiled away so many hours, for
+the last time in our society, and the little gages which were but the
+outward and visible signs of the regard we felt for our friends were
+exchanged with honest effusion. There may be--nay, there are--many
+jealousies and causes of estrangement between the people of the Old
+Country and of the New, but between the individuals of both there is a
+_camaraderie_ which cannot, I believe, be found between Englishmen and
+the natives of any country except America.
+
+"Good bye! God bless you! Be sure if ever you come to England you shall
+have a hearty welcome from me." "And from me!" "And me!" "And me!" The
+engine bell tolled, and we moved slowly on.
+
+And we were left all alone! The pleasant companions of so many weeks
+had gone! I wonder if they missed us as much as we missed them?
+
+While travelling across the Rockies and the desert to San Francisco
+and back, our course of life was pretty uniform, and one day followed
+another with almost perfect resemblance in the mode of existence and
+in all things except the scenery and the country through which we
+were passing. First, in the early morning came one of the attendants
+to our bedside with a cup of coffee, and then the curtains of the
+little cubicle were thrown aside and you looked out on either plain,
+or mountain, or river, or col; and on the faces of early risers at
+doors or windows as the train passed through some rising town. At one
+end of the saloon there was a bath-room, and from the tank there was
+always to be obtained sufficient water for the purpose of an early
+dip, which was enjoyed as occasion offered in turn by the party. Then
+a cigarette. Then we dropped in as people do at a country house, into
+the sitting-room, and exchanged ideas as to the progress made during
+the night, and the stoppages, wondered where we were, and had a little
+conversation with the conductor or Arthur as to the place where we
+could stop or get the papers--and so got over the morning till 9
+o'clock, when breakfast was announced, consisting of fish, poultry,
+meat, fruit (I had nearly said flowers, for there was always a bouquet
+on the table), tea, coffee, and cold dishes, with abundance of milk
+and butter. Where the fish came from and how they were kept fresh was
+matter of wonder, for the instances were very rare in which there was
+any indication that it had not quite recently come out of the sea or
+the river. The supply of ice was liberal and unfailing, and whenever
+we stopped at any considerable station the whole disposable strength
+of the attendants in the train was employed in grappling with large
+blocks of it and stowing it away in the ice reservoir, in which were
+the larder and the cellar for such wines as needed cooling, and for
+the vegetables and meat, of which there were great stores constantly
+laid in. Then after breakfast there was reading or sight-seeing,
+investigating the line, examining the maps, receiving visits and
+returning them in other parts of the train, till in the very hot days
+it was necessary, after expelling the flies, which were troublesome on
+occasion, to draw the dust-blinds and the curtains of the carriages,
+to mitigate the fierceness of the sun. It was objected occasionally
+that by this process we deprived ourselves of the opportunity of
+what was called "seeing the country," but after all a glance now
+and then is quite sufficient to reveal the general character of the
+districts through which the train is running; and the most diligent and
+painstaking observer cannot keep his eyes fixed steadily for a day on
+the external aspects of the region through which he is travelling. I
+should be sorry to declare that every one was wide awake all the time
+of the forenoon and up to the period of lunch, which too often exceeded
+on the side of many dishes, being, in fact, a mid-day dinner; but then
+no one was obliged to eat more than he liked, or drink either. Then
+came the longest stretch of the day, and at its close another banquet;
+and as the sun declined and the temperature decreased, we could take
+more pleasure in looking out at the fantastic forms of the vegetation
+which clothed the arid rocks in the desert, or on the bright green
+prairie, or on the towering mountains, waiting till the sun had set,
+generally in a blaze of glory. There were, of course, interruptions and
+variations as we halted at the more important places; disappointments
+about letters which had been telegraphed for and which were expected
+day after day, constituted also a matter of conversation and discourse.
+There was an harmonium in the sitting-room of the palace car, but
+no one had the art of playing it, although we had plenty of music of
+another sort; for after dinner the gentlemen of the railroad party who
+had not dined with us came in, and we were never tired of listening to
+the songs, so original and amusing, which they gave with great spirit
+and admirable time and tune, for it happened they all possessed good
+voices, and the melodies with which the troops of coloured minstrels
+have now rendered the world familiar were then new to us.
+
+During the whole of our tour the weather has been most favourable.
+With the exception of the rainy days in Canada, and the cold and
+rawness which characterised the time of our short visit to Richmond,
+there was nothing worse to complain of than continual sunshine. Now
+and then the temperature was a little too good to be pleasant when we
+were traversing the beds of the dry seas in the desert in Colorado and
+California, but that was something to look back upon with satisfaction,
+because there was no time lost in keeping within doors owing to the
+rain and storm or cold. "Within doors," however, is a phrase scarcely
+applicable to our mode of life, as it would imply that we were in
+stable habitations, whereas, as will have been seen by those who
+have accompanied us so far, we "lived and moved, and had our being"
+in railway carriages; a mode of life rendered so comfortable by all
+appliances, that it was sometimes no relief to be told that we would
+have to pass the night at an hotel.
+
+For nine days and nine nights in succession, on one occasion, we never
+slept out of the carriages or got out of the train except to take a
+stroll about the station, or a peep into the street of a small town
+whilst we were waiting, and one got quite accustomed to that nomad and
+yet civilised mode of existence, where at every halting-place we were
+supplied with the latest intelligence by the local papers, and made
+the recipients of some attention or courtesy, visits and compliments
+(the remarks of the other sort not being many), bouquets of flowers,
+presents of fruit, and plenty of conversation. But that my critics
+might say I dilate too much upon the material enjoyment of life, I
+would describe at length the means which were supplied in the course
+of these long journeys for animal enjoyment. Never could there be found
+more attentive and obliging domestics than the coloured men who waited
+upon us--Arthur and his fellows. There lived in the kitchen compartment
+of the train, at the end of one of the saloons, a coloured cook,
+very intelligent and gossipy, full of quaint conceits and dishes and
+conversation, who commenced life as a slave on a Southern plantation,
+probably adopted for indoor purposes on account of his smartness. He
+liberated himself in the course of the war, and marched off with a
+regiment of Federals in the capacity of cook and body-servant to one
+of the officers, wherein he saw a great amount of very hard fighting
+at very close quarters. This adventurous modern Othello was wont to
+discourse with much animation when he came out for a breath of fresh
+air on the platform and could find anybody to talk to him, although
+he could move no more tender heart than that of Sir Henry Green. The
+gentlemen of the Atchison, &c., Railway, when travelling with us, had
+a _cordon bleu_ in the saloon--an Italian or Frenchman, I think, or
+at all events a French-speaking man, who had served also, and would
+have done credit to an establishment where faults in a _chef_ would
+not lightly be condoned. In the interchange of courtesies, Mr. White
+and his friends invited our party now and then to dine in the saloon,
+which was not "across the way," but up a little, on the line, being the
+saloon in front of us.
+
+But here we are at Kansas City once again! At 5.30 P.M. the train
+arrived at the platform, which was gay with a Sunday crowd, of
+whom many were negresses--black, brown, brindled, and yellow
+_citoyennes_--in much variety of colour and garmenting. Unlike Samson,
+their weakness is in their hair, and like Achilles, they are vulnerable
+about the heels (to the arrows of an aesthetical criticism, which
+accepts the Greek idea of beauty in form); but they seemed to enjoy
+life amazingly, and not to be in need of beaux; perhaps the happiest
+people in the world now that their chattel days are over. It was late
+when we turned into our berths, for it was a lovely night and the
+fire-flies exercised a great attraction over us, but at last the charm
+was worn out and we slept till morning without a break.
+
+_June 20th._--Still the same boundless plain. In vain does one look for
+the grass fields with close, even, carpet-like surface to be seen in
+Europe. We are still passing through exceedingly rich land--the fields
+covered with flocks of sheep and herds of good-looking cattle. There
+are more trees by the stream-side, and shrubs growing in the hollows.
+Habitations are more frequent, and so are fencing and planting. As the
+sun was setting we approached St. Louis. There were some park-like
+glades, and vistas opening up to pleasant mansions, amid grounds
+showing marks of culture. There had been a severe thunderstorm the
+night before, and the St. Louis Station had still traces of its effects
+in pools of mud. But the rain had cooled the air, and the people were
+rejoicing exceedingly in the great improvement that had taken place
+in the weather, for, they told us, men and women had been dropping
+down with the heat a few days ago as though they had been struck by
+musketry.
+
+The appearance of the St. Louis Terminus gave one a high idea of the
+importance of this city. Eight trains were waiting on their respective
+lines to start with passengers to all parts of the Union; and by
+the simple device of placing at the end of each train a large board
+announcing its destination and the time of its departure, much anxiety
+was saved to intending passengers, not to speak of the irritation of
+officials avoided by this simple expedient. The journey was continued
+by the Indianopolis and Vandalia, and by what is called the "Pa'handle"
+line to the Pennsylvania Railroad on to Philadelphia. The train was
+timed on Tuesday so that we were able to see the famous passage over
+the Alleghany Mountains from Conemaugh to Altoona. For nearly eleven
+miles we were carried without steam, and with the brakes on, through
+very fine scenery, down the mountain-side, but the summit was crossed
+in the darkness of a tunnel 1200 yards long. There are some striking
+engineering feats in the way of curves and gradients, and the trace
+of the line is very bold all the way down to Altoona, where the
+Pennsylvania Railroad engine and machinery shops are established--the
+centre of a population of some 17,000 souls, where twenty years ago
+"there were," as a friend said, "only bears, deer, woodpeckers, and
+skallywags." The Duke, Mr. Stephen, and our railway experts got out
+and visited the workshops, and came back very much pleased at the
+discovery of several London and North-Western men in good positions
+in the Pennsylvania Railroad Company's service, who welcomed their
+old directors with effusion, and that there was nothing visible there
+for Crewe to copy, unless perhaps cast-iron wheels. The speed at
+which we travelled was a sensible proof that we were once more on the
+line of our old friends of Pennsylvania. From Altoona to Harrisburg,
+132 miles, we rattled along in two hours and forty-three minutes. On
+another stretch of the line we travelled eighty-three miles in one
+hour and forty-two seconds, including stoppages; and the rapid motion
+was very agreeable, as there was a perceptible increase of temperature
+after we reached the plains and approached the beautiful valley of the
+Susquehannah--a scene of industry, prosperity, and peace. Fortunately
+there was a good light on the river, and we had a fine view of the
+country all the way to Harrisburg under the rays of the setting sun.
+A little farther on we were gratified by the appearance of General
+Roberts at a station on the way, where he was awaiting the Duke to
+congratulate him on his safe return from the Western expedition, and we
+bade him farewell at his own house, with many sincere and well-deserved
+acknowledgments of great and constant kindness. Then over the river by
+the noble bridge, and on to Philadelphia. We did not visit Pittsburg,
+which was vomiting out masses of smoke, nor did we halt this time at
+the capital of the Quaker State.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+NEW YORK--NEWPORT--DEPARTURE.
+
+ Coney Island--Newport--Bass-fishing--Habit of
+ Spitting--Brighton Beach--Newport--Coaching--Extra
+ Ecclesiam--Victories of American Horses--Newport
+ Avenues--Return to New York--Our last day in America.
+
+
+The special train was detained by the immense amount of traffic on the
+line, as we approached New York, and we did not reach Brooklyn till a
+little before 11 P.M. on June 21, so that it was past midnight when we
+ascended the steps of the Windsor Hotel, which we had selected by way
+of a change, and found to be every way commendable, with the exception
+of its distance from the busy parts of the city. The following day
+was devoted to letter reading and writing, receiving visitors, and
+various attempts "to go out," which were not generally successful, for
+New York was palpitating with the intense heat. The "heated term" was
+in full vigour, but it was now quite temperate in comparison to the
+excesses which had marked its advent some time before our arrival. In
+the evening we got up strength and courage enough to go to Wallack's
+Theatre, a very pretty, well-constructed house, and saw "The World"
+excellently acted and admirably put on the stage. Next day, June
+23rd, in virtue of a solemn league and covenant with Uncle Sam and
+Mr. Hurlbut, the Duke and I devoted ourselves to fresh fields and
+pastures new, and ordered ourselves accordingly for Coney Island. A
+long bank of sand by the sea-shore has, by an accident, become one of
+the most crowded resorts in the world, and to-day there were races in
+the new ground. It was not, as we found, so easy to get there. Having
+the advantage of two experienced guides, our party of four managed to
+break up into two and to miss each other; one taking the boat at one
+iron pier, and the other embarking by a different mode of conveyance.
+But as we were bound to see Coney Island, the Race course being a
+secondary object, our temporary separation did not prove a source of
+great annoyance.
+
+The early settlers would indeed have been astonished if they could
+look round and see what they have brought the quiet place to in these
+later days. They were Quakers persecuted by the good Christians of New
+England, who were driven out of Boston as ruthlessly as though they
+had been malignants and papists of the worst sort. They settled the
+township of Gravesend about 250 years ago, and amongst the conspicuous
+settlers occurs the title and name of Lady Deborah Moody, of whom this
+deponent knows nothing, but wonders how, with such a title, she managed
+to have influence amongst a Society of Friends.
+
+A ship was built, so the Americans say, of 70 tons in 1699, by the
+descendants of the Quaker settlers, and less than 100 years later
+the bold republicans, abandoning the doctrines of peace, engaged
+and captured an English corvette off the island. It was all along of
+General How, who landed his troops here and set the people to work on
+the fortifications he threw up, whether they would or no. A corvette,
+bound to Halifax, anchored off the island, and an old whaler, who,
+says the chronicler, must have been smarting under the wrongs he had
+suffered at the hands of the red-coats, or who possibly regarded the
+work as he would the capture of a finner or a bottle-nose, imparted
+to a few trusty friends the idea of "cutting her out." So embarking at
+night in a couple of boats, they stole down with muffled oars and ran
+up under the stern of the ship. There was no watch, and through the
+cabin windows the officers could be seen playing cards. The crews of
+the boats boarded the corvette simultaneously, seized, overpowered, and
+bound the officers and men, lowered them into their boats, and, having
+set the man-of-war on fire, pulled over to the Jersey shore with their
+prisoners. It is to be hoped that the demeanour and language of the
+captain have been misrepresented by local tradition; but he is said
+to have cried bitterly, and to have exclaimed, "To be surprised and
+captured by two blooming egg-shells is too blasted bad!"
+
+There was a long period of neglect before Fashion and the populace
+found out the attractions of Coney Island. Fishermen, oyster-catchers,
+and sportsmen visited the sandy beach from time to time; then after
+a while a few houses were run up of a very inferior class, and these
+were frequented by the very worst of the scum of New York, so that it
+was almost dangerous, and certainly disgusting, to go among them, while
+the scenes on the beach, to which the present proceedings afford such
+a contrast, were described as being of the most disgraceful character.
+
+The official directions for spending a day at Coney Island certainly
+indicate a belief in the possession of enormous physical energy and
+indefatigable curiosity on the part of the visitors in those who
+compose the code. Having given you sailing instructions by the iron
+steam boat to Bay Ridge for the Sea Beach Railway (ticket 35 cents),
+you are to visit the Sea View Palace Hotel, the Piazza, the two iron
+piers, the _Camera obscura_ (10 cents), the Great Milking Cow, the
+top of the observatory (15 cents); then to eat a Rhode Island clam
+bake (50 cents), visit the aquarium (10 cents), take a park waggon and
+ride over the Concourse to Brighton; see the hotel grounds and bathing
+pavilion there; then take the Marine Railway (5 cents) to Manhattan
+Beach; visit the Oriental Hotel and take the Marine Railway to Point
+Breeze (10 cents) and return back to Brighton Beach Pavilion and take
+a bath; then see the Museum of Living Wonders (10 cents), dine at the
+Hotel Brighton, hear a concert in the evening, and return to New York
+by 11 o'clock. "This trip," observes the compiler, "may fatigue one,
+but the excitement soon overcomes the trouble." Coney Island is indeed
+an institution.
+
+Along the sea front of the bank for some three or four miles there
+has been constructed an esplanade lined with seats, and defended from
+the sea by a stone wall. Outside there is a belt of shingle on which
+the surf breaks, but not violently, unless in bad weather. Large
+bathing establishments, with every appliance, are placed at convenient
+intervals along the shore. Here in the season tens of thousands of
+people may be seen, all properly and decently attired, disporting in
+the waves. At the time of our visit, the hour and the season of the
+year seemed not to be favourable to the indulgence. We were too late
+in the day. It is an early place, and from 7 till 9 A.M. from the
+month of June to the end of September are described as the orthodox
+periods. Nevertheless the spectacle was quite unique, and if you can
+imagine Brighton with half-a-dozen Pavilions blown out to twice their
+size, and the largest hotels multiplied by ten in length, breadth, and
+depth, you may fancy what the Coney Island front is, provided always
+that you can also conjure up (literally) myriads of well-dressed men,
+women, and children perambulating the esplanade or sitting in the
+grounds around the various establishments which occupy a large space
+inland--pavilions, hotels, exhibitions, restaurants, and club-houses.
+There were fireworks going on in broad day; but these were principally
+for the purpose of exhibiting very ingenious Japanese figures, which
+were discharged from bombs, and which gradually descending were objects
+of eager competition amongst the younger members of the enormous
+multitude. And with all so much good-humour, so much propriety of
+demeanour; none of the brutal rushes of "roughs" which disgust one
+with English popular assemblages--none of the brutal horse-play, and
+screams, and unmeaning cries of the 'Arrys and the Bills of our popular
+resorts.
+
+Looking at Mr. Marshall's excellent book on the United States, which
+we found to be copious and accurate, I was struck by what he says
+respecting a habit of the people which, according to my experience,
+has very much decreased since I was last in the States, but which
+he finds in as full force, and repulsive as ever. I am bound to say
+I think the habit of spitting has very much diminished, but from
+numerous evidences, from the presence of spittoons in every room and
+in the passages of the hotels, and from public admonitions, such as
+one we saw at some of the theatres, that the audience would not spit
+upon the stage, I must believe that it still exists. What the cause
+of this habit may be it is not easy to determine. It cannot be in the
+race, because it is scarcely an "English" habit. I would be inclined
+to attribute it to the drinking of iced water, but ladies in America
+use the national beverage quite as freely as the men, and spitting is a
+masculine failing. Can it be a result of climate? Scarcely. For in the
+States, British-born people do not seem to be affected by the influence
+of the habit in those around them after many years' residence. Smokers
+and non-smokers alike indulge in the practice, so that tobacco cannot
+be charged with the disagreeable custom. I assume that it is as common
+as Mr. Marshall asserts it is, but I am bound to say, according to
+my own observation and experience on my last visit, that there was no
+evidence to show that it was common or national. Chewing tobacco also
+appears to me to have fewer votaries than formerly. A remark to that
+effect at Richmond brought upon me something like a rebuke from the
+gentleman to whom I spoke, a Judge of the land. "No, sir," he said,
+"not at all! I rather think we chew more than ever!" And, to illustrate
+his faith, he produced a silver box, shaped a plug of no doubt very
+excellent weed, and thrust it into his mouth. I do not recollect,
+however, meeting a gentleman in the course of our journey who used
+tobacco in that way, with that exception.
+
+In the grounds in front of the pavilion, where an excellent orchestra
+of some one hundred performers were playing, sat a very large and
+appreciative audience, who applauded with discrimination, and were
+content with the good performance of each piece.
+
+Our common rendezvous was the Surf Club, one of the numerous convivial
+associations for which Coney Island seems to be specially adapted;
+and I presume the name had nothing at all to do with any supposed
+amusements of the members in connection with the surf on the beach
+outside. There was some difficulty in finding our way through a
+labyrinth of rooms all filled with guests: with corridors swarming
+with people; with vast halls, where at hundreds of tables there were
+seated people engaged in the consumption of the _menu_ of a Coney
+Island restaurant, abounding in strange dishes and attended by armies
+of waiters. At a rough guess, I should say there may have been about
+4000 people in the building--and this was but one of several--I think
+the Brighton Beach Hotel, but of this I am not quite sure.
+
+When the Prospect Park and Coney Island Railroad was opened none
+believed in its success, but the foresight of the projector was
+justified; and when it was found that respectable people would go
+there, if the vagabonds of both sexes and their associates were driven
+away, the police asserted themselves, and swept off the gamblers and
+the others of a still more dangerous class, who were to be found there
+in increasing numbers every year; and then hotels were erected and
+landing-places made for the steamers; and now the electric light blazes
+in a hundred halls, and music and rejoicing sound late into the night,
+contending with the noise of the surf upon the beach. Bowling-alleys,
+shooting-grounds, archery, croquet, sailing and rowing, all invite some
+of the visitors, according to their tastes. An amusing exemplification
+of the ingenuity of American advertisers is afforded by the sailing
+vessels, which display in enormous characters on their main-sails
+the names of quack medicines, from which no corner of this continent
+appears to be safe.
+
+On June 24th the party, which had been somewhat dislocated, reunited
+their scattered forces, and at 2 P.M. started by train after a little
+repose, for Newport, R.I. It was a kind of holiday after our travels,
+but somewhat out of place, for we were told the Ocean House was
+scarcely ready; but we should not have found it out, had we not been
+informed of the fact. The newspapers had been on the alert, and soon
+after the Duke's arrival visitors began to call and invitations to pour
+in--some well-nigh irresistible, for they included opportunities for
+experiences of bass-fishing.
+
+_June 25th._--Newport has not yet put on its festive attire. It is
+not the season, and we ought not to be here. Nevertheless it is still
+so pleasant, and so respectably dull, that one enjoys it amazingly.
+After breakfast we walked down to the seashore and sat gazing on
+vacancy, and on three yellow ladies collecting clams. Returning thence
+in a very hot sun, ran to earth in the hotel where, presently, there
+were many visitors; and how kind and anxious to please they were! Mr.
+Fearing drove up later on the top of a drag, and whirled us away to
+a charming fishing-box on the shore, in order to judge for ourselves
+what bass-fishing was like. It was a very pretty drive, and Mr. Fearing
+handled his "four" as if he were bent on joining the Coaching Club--not
+indiscreetly, as the horses were not accustomed to going together, but
+with satisfactory decision--and we all were landed without mishap by
+the side of the road, close to one of the best-organised sporting-boxes
+I have ever seen, built entirely for the comfort and delectation of
+Mr. Fearing and two or three friends who own the bass-fishing stands,
+at the end of one of which a gentleman was then busily engaged in his
+pastime, for the sea comes rolling up upon the rocks within some forty
+or fifty yards of the sward of the green meadows on which the house
+is placed. From it projects into the breakers a platform supported
+on iron pillars, at the end of which there is an enlargement of the
+structure to enable the fisherman and his attendants to stand at their
+ease--the one in hurling the bait and the other in preparing it. And
+first, as a proof that the labour is not futile, there was exhibited a
+terrible-headed monster with great scales, which had been caught that
+morning by Mr. Whipple--a bass of 57 lbs. weight, of which I think the
+skull and jaws and gills must have weighed a third. The fishing is not,
+as I found, to be done at once, but needs a little practice. The art of
+casting consists in the double operation of jerking the bait from the
+top of a stiff rod, and checking the run of the line without permitting
+it to overrun, which it is very apt to do in an inexperienced hand, by
+a pressure of the thumb on the reel, just sufficient to let the weight
+of the bait carry out the hook to the farthest stretch of the jerk.
+The rod, not more than eight or nine feet long, a work of great art,
+and costly, is furnished with a reel, also very expensive, containing a
+couple of hundred yards of prepared line. At the end is a large single
+hook, sometimes secured to a piece of piano-wire, as the "blue fish"
+will cut through the strongest cord or gut. To this is fixed a junk of
+fat oily fish, of which supplies are kept in a basket close at hand,
+to be cut up for ever and ever by the attendant, and ever and anon
+pieces are chucked into the sea, and being of a very unctuous nature,
+the oil rising to the top, floats away on the surface of the water, and
+attracts the bass within measurable distance of the platform. Captain
+Fearing threw, Mr. Whipple threw, and the gentlemen at the end of
+another pier emulated them, and pounds, perhaps stones, of bait were
+thrown into the sea, but the bass, which are capricious, like most
+fish, were not to be caught; and so after a time we returned to the
+cottage.
+
+I was, unfortunately, unable to accept an invitation from one of the
+many hospitable gentlemen in Newport, to go out and spend the evening
+on a desolate island, where they are said generally to have exceedingly
+good sport, in order to get up before sunrise the following morning
+and essay my skill, or want of it, in bass-fishing. Mr. Wright, an
+enthusiastic sportsman, availed himself of a like invitation with
+great pleasure and with many anticipations of delight, but on Monday
+morning he returned weather-beaten back, and boot-less and bass-less
+home, although he assured me he enjoyed himself very much, and had very
+agreeable company out at sea on the rock.
+
+The following day (June 26th) was cloudy and cool, and all that was
+of rank and fashion in Newport went to All Souls Church. There are
+many churches in Newport, and in the height of the season, each is,
+I am told, well filled on Sundays. And wonderful it is that there is
+neither dissension nor controversy among the congregations. They mingle
+together coming and going, affording to me, who have been accustomed at
+times to observe the manners and customs of my country men and women
+on like occasions in Ireland and elsewhere, ground for wonder, not
+unintermingled with an ardent desire that we, nearer home, could learn
+the secret of this moderation.
+
+Mr. Bridgman, our fellow-passenger in the "_Gallia_," is enjoying his
+_villeggiatura_ with his wife and family in a pretty little cottage.
+We were very much pleased indeed to renew our acquaintance with him,
+although there was no scope for the display of his fine talents as a
+salad-maker. It was not foggy enough for the ladies, who delight in a
+thick and moist _brume_ from the Banks, and who sit at the open windows
+when it comes on for the sake of their complexions, as it is esteemed
+a sovereign cosmetic beyond Maydew or Kalydor. Whether it be rightly
+credited with these virtues or not, I can answer for the presence of
+many fair ladies in church, and on their way to and fro in the streets.
+We dined with Mr. and Mrs. Keene, who reside in one of the best villas
+of the many charming dwellings in Newport.
+
+The victories of the American horses in France and England created
+an enthusiasm in the States almost as intense as though they had been
+won by the national fleets or armies. From one end of the Union to the
+other the news was flashed the same day, and we saw the names of the
+conquerors in large letters in every newspaper. Unfortunately there
+came at the same time reports of foul play to American competitors at
+the hands of some English roughs, and there was a good deal of heat
+caused by the objections taken to the entry of the "Cornell Crew" at
+Henley. These international contests should be very carefully conducted
+and judiciously worked, or they will do more harm than good, if indeed
+they do any good at all. The injurious insinuations respecting the age
+of Foxhall could but excite indignation in the minds of honourable men
+against whom they were directed.
+
+There is a State House in the town, and there is also a mansion
+occupied by Commodore Perry, but the most useful inhabitant of the
+place appears to have been one Abraham Touro, a Jew, who gave his name
+to the park, a cemetery, a synagogue, and a street. Altogether there
+is rather an old-world air and look in the town; but one must go along
+the Avenues to have an idea of the charms which lead so many of the
+principal families of the Eastern States to make the place a resort
+when they are not enjoying the delights of travel in Europe, or that
+blissful existence which endears Paris to our Transatlantic relatives.
+Bellevue Avenue is bordered by a number of very sprightly dwellings,
+of every order and disorder of architecture, and rejoicing in all the
+extraordinary richness and elaboration of American workmanship in wood,
+each standing in a little park of its own, generally rich with trees,
+shrubs, and an ornamental garden. Several of these interiors, as we
+had reason to know, were furnished in the very best taste, and filled
+with objects of art, excellent examples of good masters, principally
+foreign, and articles imported from all the corners of the globe. Of
+an afternoon the ladies might be seen driving, in very well turned-out
+carriages, to some rendezvous where lawn-tennis or a picnic awaited
+them; and altogether, even at this time of year, Newport presented a
+picture of great refinement and comfort, which enable the visitor to
+understand how attractive it must be in the height of the season, and
+why it is Americans are so fond of life in Rhode Island.
+
+I am not in a position to throw the smallest doubt upon the statement
+that the mass of stones in the form of a tower, ivy and moss covered,
+and evidently the work of human hands, was not built by the hardy
+Norsemen hundreds of years before the arrival of Columbus. There are,
+moreover, people who declare that the erection is due to a British
+governor of the colony, when it was more prosperous as a commercial
+resort, though not so fashionable as it is at present. But American
+antiquaries take a great pleasure in propping up the proofs which have
+been adduced of Scandinavian enterprise and discovery on the continent,
+many centuries before Vespuccius, Columbus, and the English navigators
+lived.
+
+We dined on the evening of the 27th at the house of Mr. Shattock,
+a gentleman of New York, who had assembled a party of very pleasant
+people to meet the Duke, and kindly hastened his dinner-hour to suit
+our convenience, as we were obliged to go on board the Fall River boat,
+which called at 9.30 P.M. to take up passengers for the Empire City.
+There was some difficulty about getting cabins or state rooms as they
+are called, but "Uncle Sam," who came from New York to consort with us
+quietly, applied himself diligently to telegraph wires, telephones,
+and the like, and when the great steamer came alongside the wharf
+our dormitories were ready. The night was calm and fine. There was an
+excellent band, quite worthy of being called an orchestra, on board,
+which played to the delight of a large audience till it was bed-time.
+As a "sight" for a foreigner, nothing could be more striking than
+the vast saloon, brilliantly illuminated, with hundreds of people on
+sofas, chairs, and benches, reading or conversing in the intervals
+of the music, and presenting infinite varieties of type and class,
+yet all so orderly and well-behaved; and if you moved quietly through
+the crowd, your ear caught many strange languages interpolating the
+American speech--German, French, Polish, Russian, Italian, and, perhaps
+the natives would say, British. There is some care observed in the
+locking up of cabins, and I believe there are detectives and police on
+board the boats; but it is said they do not look after the morals of
+the passengers, and concern themselves only with vested interests in
+portable property. There was no sea on, and the only motion was caused
+by the beating of the paddles and the throbbing of the engine, and
+early in the morning of the next day we were at our quarters in our
+comfortable hotel in the Fifth Avenue.
+
+_June 29th._--And yet more excursions. Bound by a long-standing
+engagement, a small detachment of our party set out this evening to
+visit Mr. Barlow at his country place, Long Island, which travellers,
+perhaps, have not much occasion to see. The Mayor of New York (Mr.
+Grace) and Mr. O'Gorman were on the steamer which took the Duke, Mr. S.
+Ward, Mr. Hurlbut, and our host down the Sound, and were introduced to
+us by Mr. Barlow. The first-named gentleman I mentioned in one of the
+early pages of this diary in connection with the vigorous efforts to
+purify the civic atmosphere made by him on his accession to office. I
+learn that he has since obtained a large measure of success, and let me
+hope corresponding thanks from his fellow-citizens. Attacks on corrupt
+influences are apt to receive lukewarm support from the politicians.
+The power of the respectable classes, which hold aloof from politics,
+is not large. Mr. Grace had more opposition than help from his own
+countrymen, who have been long nearly omnipotent in New York, and who
+monopolise a large proportion of the civic offices and employment.
+Mr. O'Gorman, one of the traversers with O'Connell in the famous State
+trials, is one of the leading lawyers of New York, and is held in much
+respect by his fellow-citizens. The "old Country" is still dear to him,
+but I seemed to gather from his remarks that he shared in the distrust
+which American lawyers generally expressed respecting the principle of
+the Land Bill then under discussion as far as interference with the law
+of contract--"the very foundation of social life"--was involved. Glen
+Cove is a beautiful place, standing high above the level of the sea,
+and commanding charming views of the sound and of the opposite shore.
+It is surrounded by trees, ornamented by woodland and fine natural
+groves, broken up by ravines, through which trickle streams of water.
+The mansion is furnished with every comfort and luxury, and we had a
+garden to saunter about in the morning, and a genial hostess to talk
+to, and her fair daughter to sing for us, so that it would have pleased
+us well to have made a longer sojourn at Glen Cove. Here we passed two
+very peaceful days, part of Wednesday and Thursday, and in a pleasant
+drive with our host in the early morning had some slight outlook on
+umbrageous Long Island. "_O! si angulus iste!_" It is 115 miles long
+and 14 miles broad, and quite big enough for me! And there be deer
+in the woods and trout in the rivers, and fish in all the creeks,
+and game in the wooded lagoons, and forest, lake, and civilised life,
+and many things to please the eye; and then the comet was so good as
+to display his glories and his tail before Glen Cove. But our time
+of departure from the States was drawing near, and there were still
+things to be done in New York, and many engagements to be kept, ere we
+started on our homeward journey on July 2nd; and at 12.35 on the 30th
+June the Duke and I took the "cars" at a rural station, and reached
+New York at 2.35, in time for a run through Tiffany's and some little
+shopping and visiting. There was a dinner arranged by "Uncle Sam" at
+"Sutherland's" in honour of the famous city restaurant. The house is
+one of a type which has, I believe, disappeared in the "City," where
+once flourished famous establishments such as Williams' Beef Shop
+in the Old Bailey, Dolly's in Paternoster Row, the Billingsgate Fish
+Ordinary, Jacquet's, &c., like it in character. Great New Yorkers do
+not disdain to cross the threshold, within which they find admirable
+fare and excellent wines--the national delights of clam chowder, clam
+soup, soft-shell crabs, and many other Transatlantic delicacies--at
+the far end of Broadway, still holding its own against the fashionable
+restaurants. Of the party who dined there with Chancellor Robertson
+and others in 1861, only "Uncle Sam," Mr. S. Barlow, and I survive; but
+the host, a granitic sort of man, with a kindly Scottish heart warming
+the case inside, seems capable of presiding over his feasts for another
+generation.
+
+_July 1st._--It was difficult to realise the idea that this was our
+last day in America, but the truth was forced on us by the practical
+duties of getting the baggage ready and settling up generally, ending
+with a dinner at the Turf Club, where we met Mr. Keene, of Foxhall
+fame, who had also entertained us at Newport, Mr. Jerome, Mr. Stuart,
+Mr. Travers, and other fathers of the New York sporting world, which
+seems very like our own, and had to drink madeira of all but fabulous
+antiquity and excellence.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+RETURN TO EUROPE.
+
+ The "_City of Berlin_"--The Inman Line--The Service at Roche's
+ Point--Queenstown Discomforts--A sorry Welcome Home.
+
+
+_July 2nd._[B]--Up at 5.30. The Duke, Lady Green, Sir Henry, Mr.
+Wright, Edward, all engaged in the transport department, with Mr.
+Trowbridge in observation; incessant activity. The Queen Anne coach
+was in readiness at 7.30, and in half an hour more we were discharged
+at the Inman wharf. There was a great flotilla--five large steamers
+leaving at the same period for Liverpool, and there was the usual
+throng at the landing-places of friends to bid "good-bye" to those who
+were about to cross the Atlantic. The steamer we had selected belonged
+to the Inman line, and whatever there may have been wanting to the eye
+on board, compared to the trimness and paint of the Cunard steamers,
+there was nothing to regret in our accommodation or service. There were
+so many passengers that the dining-saloon, illuminated by the electric
+light--which was also used for the purpose of lighting the engine-room
+and the lamps in the corridors--would not contain them all at the same
+time, and so there were two messes for dinner. Epergnes filled with the
+most beautiful flowers were ranged in order, and a rampant war-steed
+composed of white roses was displayed on the table. I am not about to
+give a log-book, or to trespass on the patience of my readers by an
+account of such an ordinary event as a passage home. The second day
+after we left New York was the anniversary of Independence, July 4th,
+and the day was duly celebrated by the citizens of the United States,
+who constituted the large majority of our fellow-passengers. The "stars
+and stripes" were hoisted at the main, and the cabin was draped with
+British and American flags. But there was no speechifying, and the
+spread-eagle was content with moderate flights; a recitation and a song
+or two, and the fire of champagne corks, being the only indications of
+an extraordinary festivity.
+
+About this time of the year the Atlantic, in the latitudes which
+we traverse, is rather vexed of fogs; and if one be disposed to low
+spirits, I know nothing which weighs upon him more than the sound of
+the fog-horn. But what must it be for the captain, who is perforce
+obliged to go at full speed, or as near to it as he can, with the
+expectation every moment of some startled cry from the bow "Sail right
+ahead!" Nor is it quite out of the running that an iceberg may be
+taking a sail across his course. Fortunately we had no experiences of
+the kind; and as night was falling on the 10th July land was in sight.
+
+The lights of the Fastnet were seen through drifting haze, and about 10
+o'clock at night the "_City of Berlin_" steamed through a rising sea,
+with a strong beam wind, into the roadstead of Roche's Point, burned
+her rockets, and laid-to for the steamer to take the mails, and those
+passengers who had decided to land, on shore.
+
+It was blowing freshly, and rain fell heavily; and as we looked down
+from the lighted decks on the murky water, and made out the tug as
+she paddled up to us, rising and falling on the waves, we were seized
+with reasonable misgivings as to the propriety of leaving our ship and
+taking to such a craft. I am bound to say that our experience more than
+amply justified them.
+
+I am writing these lines with a very faint hope that any amendment
+will be introduced, in consequence of what I say, into the abominable
+service between the American vessels off Roche's Point and Queenstown.
+In fine weather and in daylight it is not of much consequence, perhaps,
+what discomfort one may be exposed to in a short passage to the
+shore; but to affront women and children with the misery which must be
+experienced at night time and in bad weather, in the steamers employed
+in the service, is little short of barbarous, if it be not indeed
+altogether so.
+
+After I had got down upon the deck of the little steamer and surveyed
+the scene around me, I thought that it would have been much wiser to
+have gone on with my friends to Liverpool; but I had some engagements
+in Ireland, and so had the experience I was glad not to share with
+my fellow-passengers, on whom I should have liked the old country
+to have made a favourable impression. There was the great steamer,
+with hundreds of waving hands, and the sound of friendly voices
+bidding us "God speed," a blaze of lights, and almost as steady as
+the solid earth, as the horrible little tug puffed away, and, getting
+from under her lee at once, encountered the swell. If she could have
+ridden over the water below, she certainly could not escape that which
+came down from above; so that we were all pretty wet and cross and
+miserable in the half-hour which elapsed before we reached the shore.
+Fortunately, there were not many passengers who availed themselves
+of the opportunity; but the deck of the steamer was crowded by poor
+people returning to their native country. Accommodation for the
+cabin passengers, except seats on the wet and sloppy decks, there was
+none. There was a little cabin, stuffy and comfortless, and moreover
+occupied by a couple of women who had come out to see friends by way
+of a pleasure excursion, and who were suffering the last extremities
+of sea-sickness. The spray broke over the luggage and passengers;
+it was in such circumstances that the custom-house officers began
+their search. One of them, opening my bag, which was unlocked, found
+a small revolver. It was unloaded, and there was no ammunition for
+it; but, nevertheless, it was seized, for I was "importing arms into
+a proclaimed district without licence." A similar mishap occurred to
+a Spanish officer, who was not quite so easily appeased as I was by
+the assurance that the arm would be given up on proper application
+to the police. His revolver, he insisted, was part of his uniform, a
+necessity of his existence, and the authorities might as well seize
+his epaulettes or spurs. However, my deadly weapon was restored to me
+some days afterwards, after a correspondence with the custom-house,
+and I dare say the Hidalgo was equally fortunate. These were incidents
+to denote that we were in the midst of trouble. There was but a sorry
+welcome for us when we landed at Queenstown. Not a car to be found,
+that I could see; but there were a few porters, and the agent of the
+hotel at the pier; and, commending my luggage to his care, I walked to
+the establishment. It surely cannot be quite an unaccustomed event for
+a steamer to arrive at Queenstown at that time of night! The last train
+for Cork had gone; and it might have been expected that lighted rooms
+and some sort of preparation would have awaited the travellers; for
+every vessel that touches at Queenstown, coming from America, surely
+lands a few people needing rest and refreshment? A demoralised waiter,
+who appeared to think that such a thing had never happened in the
+whole course of his experience, as the inroad of ten or twelve people
+asking for supper and bedrooms, informed us that nothing could be done
+until the gentleman who represented the hotel at the landing-place had
+arrived; and so we sat on the stairs for half an hour, and were then
+shown into a gaunt room, dimly lighted by gas. There was nothing ready.
+The hungry people, by dint of patience and perseverance, eventually
+succeeded about midnight in obtaining some poor substitute for supper
+and scrambled to their beds.
+
+I mention the circumstances in which my fellow-passengers and I were
+landed at Queenstown, that those who are interested in promoting
+the welfare of the port, and in making the route through Ireland
+less thoroughly objectionable, may take steps to obviate the great
+inconvenience to which travellers at present are certainly exposed.
+
+Next morning I reached Mallow. I was but a few hours in the
+"distressful country," but I found that things had gone from bad to
+worse while we were in the States. I heard from my fellow-travellers
+in the train that "Boycotting" had attained such a pitch in the South,
+that all the relations and conditions of social life were exposed
+to peril, if not destruction. And still, with the usual cheerfulness
+of Irish landlords, accustomed, as it were, to these excesses of the
+popular will, my informants talked of hunting, fishing, and shooting;
+and I heard full accounts of the state of the rivers, and of the take
+of fish which had made some of them happy. The County Cork, indeed,
+had nearly a parallel in the "wild West." But what a contrast between
+the state of public feeling, in respect to the outrages which were
+perpetrated in each, in the country we had left, and that to which
+I had returned! In the United States there was no attempt to justify
+the men who were guilty of such deeds. In Ireland it was impossible to
+obtain evidence or to convict the offenders. I am not going to close
+this narrative of our little excursion with a political disquisition,
+indeed I have not the materials for forming any opinion respecting the
+breadth and depth of what may be called the Irish national movement in
+the United States; but there seems to be a general vague impression
+in America that as the British Government was not very wise and
+equitable in its dealings with the people of the thirteen colonies
+in the reign of King George, it is, somehow or other, at the present
+moment, treating with harshness and injustice the whole of the Irish
+race in Ireland. It is impossible not to recognise the fact that the
+head, perhaps the heart, and certainly the purse of this development of
+Irish discontent are in the United States. The arms, the body, and the
+legs are in Ireland. During the whole time of our visit, although we
+visited towns where eminent orators were lecturing upon Irish subjects,
+and where representatives of the League were in session, there was not
+a trace brought home to us of the strong sympathy which undoubtedly
+exists in many American cities with the movement in Ireland. There
+were accounts of the meetings in the newspapers, and now and then a few
+leading articles on the subject; but we might have concluded, from what
+we saw and heard generally, that the Irish question was of far less
+importance to the American people than the religious views of Colonel
+Ingersoll, or the discussions between the railway companies respecting
+their fares. The recital of wrongs, most of which have been long ago
+redressed, still reaches the ear and touches the heart of the American
+public, and if the Irish population had not in many ways provoked or
+excited the antagonism of the native Americans in the towns, and of
+the Teutonic element which exercises such a powerful influence in
+the country, there would be far greater sympathy for the supposed
+oppression of the Sister Island by England. The fact that emigrants
+come from Europe is accepted as a proof that the countries which they
+leave are ill-governed; and Americans, in dealing with the emigration
+question, are apt to forget the existence and nature of the forces
+which induced their own ancestors to seek homes in the New World.
+
+The _New York Times_ declared in an article last June, that there is no
+essential difference between the two divisions of the Irish in America
+and of the Irish in Ireland. The voyage across the Atlantic works no
+transformation in Pat, and he is still as much an Irishman after his
+plunge into an alien civilisation and taking out his papers as when
+he stood on the old sod in Meath or Tipperary. "He cares no more for
+the American eagle than for an owl; but a sprig of shamrock stirs him
+to ecstasy. The name of Washington has no meaning for his ear; but
+that of St. Patrick is a living and potent reality." That statement,
+however, must be taken with qualification. There are to-day 90,000
+acres of land in Minnesota as thoroughly Irish as if they were planted
+in the centre of Connaught. There are Pats and Pats. Many of the most
+wealthy and prosperous merchants, bankers, and landowners whom we met
+in the West were not merely of Irish extraction, but born Irishmen,
+and the extraordinary spectacle of Irish millionaires who knew how to
+keep their money, and to add to it, too, may be seen in San Francisco
+and elsewhere in the West. Many, less fortunate, have high positions
+either in the army, or as politicians, or in the estimation of all
+that is great and good in America--such as Mr. O'Conor--men who have
+held aloof from politics, and who could not be tempted, even by the
+Presidentship, to enter the arena of party strife. One convicted rebel
+of 1840 now occupies a leading place at the American bar. I heard him
+denounce the Land Bill in terms he might have used in denouncing the
+atrocities of the Saxon in his hot days when O'Connell was king. The
+influence which has been acquired in many parts of the Union by the
+Irish immigration and by the descendants of immigrants has naturally
+excited at various times the opposition and indignation of the American
+born, and it has always been more or less opposed by the Teutons of
+different nationalities who occupy such a powerful position in all
+the great States of the West. But "the Native Party" is now either
+dead or sleeping. A very distinguished officer and politician said
+to me that he had at one time been a most eager and ardent adherent
+of the policy of the Native American Party, but that when he saw how
+earnestly and devotedly the Irish had come forward in defence of the
+Union, how brilliantly they had fought, and how recklessly they had
+sacrificed their lives, in 1861, he felt constrained to abandon his
+principles, and to admit their free right to all the privileges of
+American citizenship. I could not, however, but recollect that General
+Richard Taylor, in his most amusing, able, and graphic work on that
+same war, from the Confederate side of the question, bore the strongest
+testimony to the services of the Irish in the army which fought under
+the banner of the Slave States. In New York and in San Francisco
+the Irish element has exercised almost supreme control in municipal
+matters, and it may be said, without offence I hope, that, whether
+it be owing to the opposition they have encountered or to a radical
+deficiency which may be Irish rather than Celtic, their management has
+not conduced to the comfort of the cities or to the pecuniary purity
+of the Executive. In San Francisco there is a strong anti-Irish press
+and much anti-Irish feeling. The 'Argonaut' repudiates the thraldom of
+the Irish associations and factions in the Far West as strenuously as
+the 'Times' and 'Tribune' do in the East. But notwithstanding all that
+may be written and done, it is impossible to resist the influence of
+numbers under a system of suffrage so large as that which exists in
+the greater number of the American States. It was curious to read in
+a Californian paper an appeal to England to suppress Irish agitation.
+"We confidently believe," says the _Argonaut_, "that the wisdom of
+its public men, the healthful condition of its public opinion, and
+the strength of its military power will be sufficient to crush out the
+Land League movement, which is but incipient rebellion. That England
+will deal justly, firmly, and successfully with this effort of united
+ecclesiasticism and Communism is the earnest wish of every intelligent
+and independent mind that believes in free government, the guarantees
+of property, the rights, and the personal liberty of man." However,
+there are American parties, if not statesmen, whose wishes are by no
+means directed to such a consummation, and we must take note of the
+fact.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+SOME GENERAL REFLECTIONS.
+
+ Education--Free Schools--Influence of Money in
+ Politics--Corruption in Public Life--Crime on the Western
+ Borders--The Great Rebellion--Anniversaries--Great courtesy to
+ strangers--Manners and Customs.
+
+ "Westward the course of Empire takes its way;
+ The four first acts already past,
+ A fifth shall close the drama with the day,
+ Time's noblest offspring is the last."
+
+
+The "tar-water Bishop of Cloyne" would have been exceedingly astonished
+could he have seen the first line of his prophecy or averment made to
+do duty as a motto to Mr. Bancroft's History of the United States; but
+surely if the prophecy be not realised, it will be the fault of the
+agencies engaged in working it out--never in the history of mankind,
+as we know it, have such advantages been enjoyed by any nation as have
+been, and are, the appanage of the Americans of European origin in
+the New World. They have leaped into the possession of their heritage
+full armed, like Minerva from the brain of Jove. For them have all
+the champions of human rights died or conquered, and the protagonists
+of human struggles for liberty and light fought. For them Science has
+trimmed her lamp--for them martyrs have died--for them Europe and Asia
+have been in toil and travail for countless generations, and they have
+been guided across the sea to a grand continent where it would seem as
+if Nature had been engaged for myriads of ages to provide for their
+happiness and grandeur--all climes and all products are theirs--the
+bounteous plain, the ore-filled mountain, the treasures of the deep,
+the heaven-made ways by lake and river, and it would be a despair for
+all mankind if they misuse their glorious inheritance, and if all the
+nations of the world see that the pillar of fire in the west was but
+an _ignis fatuus_ dancing before their aching eyes in a Serbonian bog
+of creeds and 'isms, of factions and faiths, all struggling towards
+the gate of the Temple of Mammon. "Philosophers," in all the doubts and
+fears which the condition of the Republic inspires at times, cling with
+confidence to the palladium which is, they think, to be found in the
+system of education based on the free schools of the States. If there
+were not a distinction between knowledge and morality, they would be
+justified; but the Evil One tempted us to eat of the fruit of the tree
+which brought sin into the world, and if Americans are to be trusted
+as authorities, the result of the largest and most liberal system of
+education ever devised is not as happy in practice as it ought to be
+according to theory.
+
+As the central Government extended its sway over the Territories there
+was a uniform system, when assigning land for public objects to railway
+companies, of retaining for the School Fund a portion of the land
+in each Territory, as it was settled and admitted as such, under the
+control of the central Government. In the States Constitutions creating
+Sovereign States, there are provisions inserted, varying very little in
+language and not at all in spirit, which render it compulsory on the
+Legislature of each State to maintain public schools free to all the
+children of the people residing within its borders. Another principle,
+of universal application, provided that all schools under public
+control should be free from sectarian or denominational teaching, in
+the schools or in the books used for educational purposes. With such
+safeguards for the extension of education, it is depressing to find
+that, in certain districts at all events, crime and immorality prevail
+in the United States as extensively as in the benighted kingdoms of the
+Continent of Europe. But the most serious consideration in connection
+with the system of common schools in America, is the fact that serious
+doubts are intruding themselves respecting the success of it. In a
+recent official report it was stated that whereas the children who
+ought to go to school numbered about fourteen and a half millions, the
+average attendance was not more than five millions. But, assuming that
+all the children went to school, there are people who declare that the
+education given under the National system is by no means satisfactory.
+Mr. R. G. White affirms that the system is a failure; and high
+authorities assert that "any comparison between the results obtained
+in the public schools of New York, Cincinnati, and Boston, with those
+of such public grammar schools of England, as Bedford, Manchester, and
+the City of London, is simply ridiculous." The teachers are continually
+shifting, and when the teachers, as they do in this land of liberty,
+go away, the schools are deserted, the constant services of a staff
+cannot be retained unless there is very considerable increase in the
+rate of payment now made to the male and female teachers. None of these
+in any State have, I think, more than about 9_l._ per month. Mr. White
+says that "the mass of the pupils of the public schools are unable to
+read intelligently, to spell correctly, to write legibly, to describe
+the geography of their own country, or do anything that reasonably well
+educated children do with ease; and they cannot write a simple letter,
+they cannot do readily a simple sum in practical arithmetic, they
+cannot tell the meaning of any but the commonest of words they read and
+spell so ill. They can give rules glibly, they can recite from memory,
+they have some dry knowledge of the various ologies and osophies,
+they can, some of them, read a little French or German with very bad
+accent; but, as to all real education, they are as helpless and as
+barren as if they had never crossed the threshold of a schoolhouse."
+It is from American writers that these accusations against the common
+school system are to be gleaned. Some statisticians say that crime and
+pauperism are increasing far more rapidly than population. The charge
+on the State for punishing criminals and keeping paupers last year was
+$20,000,000, or L4,000,000; but it is too much to attribute crime and
+pauperism to the defects of the schools. It might with more reason be
+argued that the teaching of the people in the schools tends to develop
+the looseness and eccentricity of thought, where there is no religious
+teaching, which are exemplified in the uprising of extraordinary sects
+and strange philosophies; for America is the land of spiritualists,
+mesmerism, soothsaying, and mystical congregations. Mr. Hepworth Dixon
+may not be a perfectly unimpeachable authority on the subject of the
+number of spiritualists in America; but there can be no question they
+are to be counted by millions. It is averred that believers in spirits
+generally believe in "special affinities which imply a spiritual
+relation of the sexes higher and holier than that of marriage." It is
+not wonderful then that there should be also a very large number of
+divorces, especially in the New England States. Mr. Nutting says that
+"in the history of nations there has never but thrice occurred such
+a breaking up of the family tie as is now taking place, especially in
+Rhode Island and Connecticut, among the people of New England blood."
+Mormonism, although of American origin and early growth, has been
+mainly successful by the constant importation of ignorant peasants from
+Europe.
+
+There is a want of reverence on the part of children towards their
+parents which is very striking. Americans who have admitted and
+deplored this have sought to account for it by the school system,
+wherein the State usurps the place of the parent, and teaches the young
+idea to mock at any authority but that of the schoolmaster. It would be
+lamentable to have to admit that free education is associated with the
+weakening of parental influence. Theoretically, there is nothing in the
+American system to prevent the teaching of religious and moral duties
+by parents at home; but it would seem as if very little of that kind
+of instruction was given by the busy fathers and anxious mothers of the
+Republic, and that when the day's work is done at school, and some time
+given to the preparation of the studies for the day to follow, there is
+no further teaching.
+
+I do not think the rule "By their fruits shall ye know them" can be
+applied to the public schools, in connection with the prevalence of
+crime, immorality, unbelief, or eccentric religion. But it is certain
+the system has not by any means secured that high level of general
+education, or what education is supposed to bring with it, which its
+friends claim for it in the States. There is reason to believe that
+the standard of morality has not been uniformly high in the political
+world, and that in the public intelligence the judiciary does not
+aspire to an absolute immunity from suspicion. Even in the old settled
+States, legislators from time to time may be found, who, seated among
+the good and wise, excite admiration akin to that which is aroused by
+the spectacle of a fly in amber. It has been observed by travellers
+that whatever affection may exist in families, it does not attain that
+keen sensibility and lasting power which is found in French domestic
+life.
+
+When American newspapers of the greatest influence and circulation
+write invectives against the corruption which prevails in places
+high and low, when writers of great intelligence and known character
+contribute similar articles to periodicals which possess the highest
+position in the literary world of America, a stranger may be permitted
+perhaps to say a few words respecting the impression produced upon
+his mind by what he heard and read on the subject when he was in
+the country, without it being alleged that he attempts to assail
+the principles of free government, or to make invidious charges or
+wholesale accusations against a nation. I know too well the force with
+which Americans could retort if they were so minded, and how they could
+point to the reports of election judges which set forth the prevalence
+of extensive bribery, led to the suspension of writs, and will perhaps
+end in the disfranchisement of some ancient and populous boroughs and
+constituencies in England, and to the speeches of Sir Henry James in
+Parliament, to cast any stone out of my glass house on that score;
+but I do not think it can be established that persons in a position
+at all analogous to that of the members of a State Legislature have
+been purchased wholesale in England, Ireland or Scotland, or that even
+a complete Borough Corporation had been bought up. Now, nothing was
+more common in the Far West than to hear it stated openly that Senator
+So-and-so had bought his place, and that Mr. So-and-so had purchased
+a State Legislative body in order to "get through" some railway or
+other scheme. That was accepted in fact as a matter of course, and
+not contradicted or questioned by any one. We heard from time to time
+of the sums which So-and-so would expend to buy his senatorship, and
+of the money actually paid to secure the passage of a line from the
+legislature of O---- and the like, whilst stories relating to the
+purchase of judges were common in the conversation of the hotels and
+cars.
+
+I do not aver that these stories were true. I only know that they
+passed current and were not challenged by those who were around us.
+"Thoughtful persons," who exist in the United States as well as in
+the vicinity of Pall Mall clubs, lament, deplore and hate the evils
+of growing corruption with all the fervour of honest and powerless
+natures. The mechanism is scarcely concealed. It stands before the
+world with less attempt at disguise than the gallows in the gaol. Mr.
+Parton, in the 'North American Review' of this July, writing on the
+power of public plunder, says: "At present, in the ninety-fifth year
+of the Constitution, we are face to face with a state of politics of
+extreme simplicity, of which money is the motive, the means and the
+end. What was the last Presidential election but a contest of purses?
+The longest purse carried the day, and it carried the day because it
+was the longest. Some innocent readers perhaps have wondered why the
+famous orators who swayed vast multitudes day after day and night after
+night, have not been recognised in the distribution of office. They
+were paid in cash from ten dollars a night to a thousand dollars a
+week." And then he goes on to describe the business in detail, and to
+show what this power is. He says: "There is a boss in the city of New
+York who will take a contract for putting a gentleman into Congress.
+Pay him so much and you may go to sleep, wake up and find yourself
+member elect. A boss is a man who can get to the polls on election
+days masses of voters who care little or nothing for the issues of the
+campaign and know of them still less. They operate upon the strangers
+in the land who are unable to use its language and are unacquainted
+with its politics." Mr. Parton describes with humour one of these
+"bosses," an improvement on the pugilists and cormorant thieves of a
+remote period. "The Emerald Isle gave him birth; the streets of New
+York, education. To see the brawny, good-tempered Irishman walking
+abroad in his district when politics are active is to get an idea
+of how the chief of a clan strode his native heath when a marauding
+expedition was on foot. He lives in a handsome house, and has more
+property than any man has ever been able to get by legitimate service
+to the United States. He treats his dependants and retainers nobly, but
+as the agent and organiser of spoliation he is a prey to every minor
+scoundrel, for at certain seasons he dare not say no to any living
+creature. And yet it requires tact, self-possession and resource to
+move about among needy people with a pocket full of money, an embodied
+"yes," and have some of it left after the election. The strikers, as
+they are called, go for solid cash now instead of target companies and
+clambakes for which the candidates paid the bills." "Money, money,"
+exclaims Mr. Parton, "everywhere in politics, in prodigal abundance,
+money, except where it could secure and reward good service for the
+public, hecatombs for the wolves, precarious bones for the watchdogs."
+The details in the article are precise, and if they are to be trusted
+it may be doubted whether the claims of the United States to possess
+a cheap government can be maintained, for it is not cheap to pay
+responsible executive officers a precarious pittance per annum if
+now and then it costs a million dollars to change them. Mr. Secretary
+Blaine has thrice declared that the election in October 1880 in the
+State of Maine, a model New England State, was carried by money. His
+opponents declared that he and his party were as bad, and that they
+too flooded the towns with money. What renders the situation more
+dangerous is the fact that the men who provide the money for running
+these enormously expensive political combinations are either seekers
+after, or holders of, office, and the inference is that they seek to
+control Government, or, as Mr. Parton puts it, that "the Government
+is coming to be rather an appendage to a circle of wealthy operators
+than a restraint upon them." That is indeed a serious proposition, and
+the result of observation goes to support the idea that it is valid.
+The small man is in office, but the big man, his master, is outside.
+The mischief is brought prominently forward in connection with the
+sale of public lands in the North-West, which have been claimed as the
+heritage of the people, and indeed of all the nations of the world. The
+government land attracted the hardy labour of all countries, covering
+the western west with thriving towns and populous counties. But now
+the prairies are skinned by rich men, by "land-grabbers," people who
+buy up tracts of twenty thousand or thirty thousand acres wherever
+they can lay their hands upon them, evading the law and filling the
+western world with roving labourers who work on these prodigious farms
+in summer and starve in winter. This is, we are told, the result of
+"government by lobby."
+
+Occasionally there is an exceeding great and bitter cry over all this
+from the depths of the body politic. Some great paper in a moment of
+deep mental agony publishes an article like that, to which I have
+called attention, by Mr. Parton; occasionally some preacher, nobly
+daring, thinks it necessary to direct attention, from his pulpit, to
+the progress of corruption. Dr. Talmage delivered a very remarkable
+discourse whilst I was in America on the text from Job. xv. 34: "Fire
+shall consume the tabernacles of bribery." Although I do not profess
+exactly to understand to what particular sect he belongs, he is one of
+the leaders of religious thought, dividing with Beecher and others the
+popular favour in the Empire City. The State buildings at Albany ought
+to be heavily insured if the reverend gentleman's vaticinations are
+right. It was an American discourse. I cannot give the whole oration.
+The people of the Brooklyn Tabernacle were presented with a muster-roll
+of the people who had distinguished themselves amongst the great ones
+of the world. Cobden, Brougham, O'Connell and Rowland Hill were placed
+in juxtaposition as leaders on our side of the water. Of course it was
+impossible to resist the allusion to Francis Bacon and to Macclesfield;
+but it was scarcely correct to say that the Lord Chancellor
+Whiteberry--I presume a misprint for Westbury--"perished," nor do I
+quite understand what the preacher meant by the awful tragedy of the
+_Credit Mobilier_. Washington, Ben Butler, and John McClean were linked
+together for the benefit of Americans. They were, Dr. Talmage declared,
+great politicians, but "out of politics there has come one monstrous
+sin, potent and pestiferous, its two hands rotten with leprosy,
+its right hand deep in its breeches pocket. This is bribery." Dr.
+Talmage called upon the American people to judge the crime. "Under the
+temptation of this sin," he exclaimed, "Benedict Arnold sold the fort
+in the Highlands for thirty-one thousand three hundred and seventy-five
+dollars; Gorgy betrayed Hungary, Ahitophel forsook David, Judas killed
+Christ. I think," he says, "when I see the strong men who have gone
+down, of the Red Dragon in Revelation, having seven heads and ten
+horns, and seven crowns upon its head, drawing the third part of the
+stars of heaven after it." And therefore he proceeds to preach against
+bribery. He thought it was the right time, "because the Legislature
+in New York is busy in investigating charges of bribery. The whole
+country woke up in holy horror at the charge that two thousand dollars
+had been offered to influence a vote in the Legislature, as if this
+was something new; as though in one State nine hundred and seventy-five
+thousand dollars had not been paid a legislator of the State Government
+by a railway company to get its charter and secure a dedication of
+public lands; as though three-quarters of the legislators of the United
+States had not, through bribery, gone into putrefaction whose stench
+reached heaven. After a few weeks' hunting the squirrel has stolen the
+hickory nut. Gentlemen in New York hunt out wrong by day and play poker
+and old sledge at night at Delavan House. It was like the country which
+had spent six millions of dollars in lawsuits about William Tweed going
+suddenly into hysterics when it found out that he had stolen a box of
+steel pens. California is submerged in the grip of a great monopoly; in
+Kansas United States senators had been involved in charges of bribery;
+in Connecticut an election to Congress was bought as men might buy
+a box of strawberries. Last year they were convicted of attempting
+bribery in Pennsylvania, but the Court of Pardons liberated them with
+the exception of two judges, who were told that they would be cut off
+from political preferment for their obstinacy. A Pennsylvania United
+States senator used to put a price on legislators just as a Kentuckian
+puts a price on his horse." But it was not legislators alone that Dr.
+Talmage attacked. He declared that the railways, the common carriers
+of the country, were tainted by a favouritism which was, in fact,
+the result of bribery. One company made rebates in its fares to some
+favoured corporation, as in the case of a petroleum company, which
+was enabled to control the price of that light all over the world in
+consequence of a virtual monopoly that was given to it by arrangement
+with the railway. In the same way merchandise in grain, provisions,
+and cattle are placed in the hands of a few firms. "How much," asks
+Dr. Talmage, "did it cost the Elevated Railroad to keep the fare from
+dropping to five cents from ten cents? I have been told," said he,
+"three hundred thousand dollars," which is 60,000_l._ "Very seldom
+does a bill pass through any of our Legislatures if there be no money
+in it. Sometimes the bribery is in bank bills, sometimes in railroad
+passes, sometimes in political preferment, sometimes by the monopolies
+given to the legislators, what are called points, a corner, a flier, a
+cover, washing the street, salting down, ten up! If you want to know
+what these are, ask the bribed members at Albany and Harrisburg."
+Then he goes on, with some truth, to declare that the bribery begins
+far away behind all this; that it is really with the money subscribed
+for election expenses that the evil begins its course. "From the big
+reservoirs of subscribed election expenses the little rills roll down
+in ten thousand directions, and by the time the great gubernatorial,
+congressional, and presidential elections are over, the land is drunk
+with bribery." Perhaps it is quite as well that it is from an American
+orator and from an American writer such statements and such indictments
+proceed, rather than from a stranger like myself; but it is very clear
+that the evil which De Tocqueville indicated long ago has spread rather
+than diminished, and there is reason to think that it will do so until
+the public conscience of a great people is aroused to a sense of the
+enormity of the mischief. But it lies far down towards the base of
+the national institutions, and any attempt to extirpate it will fail
+until the doctrines of the "Spoils to the Victors" be rejected from the
+political catechism, and the interests of party made the means and not
+the end of political life.
+
+The letters which appeared in the _Morning Post_, written under
+the influence of the surprise and anger I felt at the extent and
+impunity of crimes of violence and the state of feeling, or want of
+it, respecting them in the West, were badly received in America, and
+were severely handled by a few papers, as I was informed; I expected
+that the mention of the subject would not prove agreeable, though
+I guarded myself most sedulously from a single offensive word--nay,
+went out of my way to palliate the offences against life and living,
+and to excuse the people who allowed them, whilst I most carefully
+drew the line--a broad one--between these border ruffians and the
+law-abiding, virtuous people of the settled States. I was not, however,
+prepared for misrepresentation. One would have thought that I accused
+the kind hosts who had received us--our generous entertainers in
+so many cities--the courteous, polished gentlemen who accompanied
+us--of murder and robbery, and ascribed to them the brutal murders
+committed by Canty or the Kid. As I quoted chapter and verse, and as
+the papers which vilified me could not deny the statements, they wrote
+that I had been imposed upon by the vivid fancy--in other phrase,
+the deliberate lying--of their brother editors in the West. One organ
+had the effrontery to declare that the Duke of Sutherland expressed
+his delight at the kind and courteous treatment of the ruffians I
+denounced; adding, "somebody lied--it was not the Duke." No. It was not
+indeed! A friend sent me one of these, and below an article in which it
+was said that I might take my place "beside Basil Hall, Mrs. Trollope,
+and Dickens for libelling the people of the United States," and that
+my stories were all inventions, there was a pregnant commentary as
+follows:--"Sunday, July 17th: Daring Train Robbery; Bandits Boarding
+Chicago, Rock Island, and Pacific Cars; The Conductor and a Passenger
+Shot Dead, and the Safe in the Express Car Robbed; the Passengers Saved
+by a Brakeman."
+
+I hope it will not be imagined that I have any desire to cast obloquy
+on the grand efforts, supremely successful as they have been, to
+turn the prairie and the desert to the uses of civilised man and
+of the world, and to open up the Western Continent to humanity and
+civilisation. I am too sensible of the courtesy, ready service, and
+hospitality everywhere accorded to the party of English travellers
+of which I was one, to write one word which I thought calculated to
+give pain or offence to any of our many friends or to any right-minded
+American. _Maculae solis!_ 'Tis a pity they are there! In a few years,
+perhaps, the memory that such things were will have passed away like
+the recollection of some evil dream. But public sentiment must make
+itself felt, and above all there must be some abatement of the maudlin
+sympathy, which is virtually on the side of crime, if it be active in
+averting punishment.
+
+Crime in America, especially in the Eastern States, is very much
+the same as it is in other countries, but in the far West there is
+more recklessness in dealing with human life, which, in spite of the
+Howard Society and of humanitarians, I believe to be connected with
+the indulgence extended under State laws by American judges and juries
+to criminals who appear to be deserving of nothing but the strict
+and unmitigated application of the rope. "Property" is safe, for the
+citizens hunt down with extraordinary energy marauders whose object is
+simply plunder. Ordinary robbers and gangs of burglars are speedily
+and summarily suppressed. It is otherwise with those who assail life
+and limb. The desperadoes who infest the "saloons," as they are called,
+with which every western settlement is sure to be provided as soon as
+the shingle roofs are placed on the earliest upheaval of deal planks
+which can be called a dwelling, have far greater immunity and freedom
+than burglars or robbers. Wherever the train stopped for water on
+our journey in New Mexico, Western Colorado, or Eastern California, a
+rectangular wooden box, with a verandah, open doors, windows screened
+by a muslin curtain, perhaps a flagstaff with the Stars and Stripes
+flying, a large signboard, and some high-sounding name--the "Grand
+Alliance," "Union League," "El Dorado," "Harmonium," "Arcadia," or
+the like--was visible, with the usual group of booted and bearded
+miners, and their horses hitched up at the door-posts in front; inside
+you would be certain to find men of the same class at a bar, behind
+which, known for miles around, the affable Charlie, Bill, or Bob was
+dispensing drinks and mixing cocktails, slings, and the other drinks,
+in which the badness of the spirit is artfully disguised by a stimulant
+of a more active character and more pronounced flavour, known as
+"bitters," and kept in subjugation by the liberal use of ice. For even
+in these burning regions ice is stored up as the one thing needful. The
+rudest miner is accustomed to it; iced drinks are consumed by classes
+in America far below the social level of those who never taste them in
+this country.
+
+As the train was halting at Colorado Springs the stewards engaged
+in an animated discussion respecting a certain erection of poles and
+rafters just visible in an adjacent field. "I tell you dat's it." "I
+say tidn't." They were discussing the probability of the scaffolding
+being the gallows whereon "Canty, the Buena Vista murderer," was to be
+hanged the day after. On April 29th, last year, Mr. Canty was standing
+on the platform in front of Lake-house with "Johnny the Ham," "Curly
+Frank," and "Off Wheeler," when Thomas Perkins appeared in an alley
+opposite, endeavouring "to induce 'Dutch Bill' to go with him to the
+office of Justice Casey, who had deputised him for the purpose." Canty
+and his companions at once ran across and demanded his release. Before
+Perkins could answer, Canty fired and missed him. The second shot
+wounded Perkins in the arm; the latter drew his pistol, but before he
+could use it Canty fired; the ball shattered the constable's hand. "For
+God's sake," he exclaimed, "is there no policeman to help me?" He fell,
+and Canty, walking close to his side, coolly sent a bullet through
+his body. He was arrested, tried, and convicted. His counsel applied
+to the Supreme Court for a _supersedeas_, but the court, after solemn
+argument, refused the application. Then they applied to the Governor
+of the State, but Mr. Pitkin, though "a weak-kneed man," would neither
+grant a reprieve nor a commutation to imprisonment for life. There
+was, he said, no ground "to set aside a verdict of a competent jury
+and the district judge reviewed and approved of by the Supreme Court."
+In the very last hour a woman came forward, and the Denver paper gave
+_verbatim et literatim_ the text of the document in which ... "with dew
+regard," she offered Sheriff Spangler $50,000 (10,000_l._) to save the
+life of W. H. Canty, her cousin, whose real name was, she said, N. H.
+Salisbury. "I entreat you to have him spared till you have an interview
+with me." She added that "Jennings and his brother in Leadville would
+pay a still larger sum. You may have ample means for life," &c. A
+gentleman of the press, who came into our train at South Arkansas,
+was present at the execution. Just before the drop fell, Canty, who
+had expressed complete confidence in his ultimate liberation till the
+day before his execution, spoke for fifteen minutes, protesting his
+innocence. Then he exclaimed, "Good-bye, nothing can save me. I have
+faith in the Saviour and a hereafter." The trap was sprung, but to the
+horror of every one, the rope broke at the beam. The murderer's neck,
+however, was dislocated, and "a happy relief was experienced" when
+it was found he had died a painless death. As he was the nephew of an
+eminent statesman it was expected his friends would take action as to
+the disposal of his remains, which were put "in a neat casket at the
+sheriff's expense." In the journal there was a woodcut of the murderer.
+"Before his likeness could be taken holes were bored in the door and
+Canty was lashed to it, and then, when the door was set upright, the
+photographer watched a favourable opportunity when the head and eyes
+were quiet and secured the impression" from which the engraving was
+made. He was not so fortunate as Frank Gilbert, who was sentenced to
+be hanged the following day for a brutal murder, but respited, "in
+order that the proceedings may be reviewed by the highest judicial
+tribunal," by Governor Pitkin at the last moment, "till July 29," the
+day on which Rosencrantz is now sentenced to be hanged. The sheriff,
+Judge Ward, the clerk of the court, and the prosecuting attorney
+joined with others in petitions to the governor on the ground that
+the Supreme Court judges had refused a _supersedeas_ in consequence of
+the defects and informalities of the record of the proceedings in the
+court below. Rosencrantz was respited, and the public, who had been
+expecting a double execution on the 18th of June, were disappointed,
+although they were allowed to slake their curiosity by the sight of the
+condemned men and by testing the ropes in the prison enclosure where
+the scaffold was ready. In the paper which gave the text of Governor
+Pitkin's reprieve there was a heading "Done Brown. Al. Huggins,
+marshal of Recene, turns out a bad man. He shoots and fatally wounds
+officer Brown of Kokomo." Phil. Foote, constable of Kokomo, formerly
+marshal of Robinson, and Al. Huggins, marshal of Recene, it seems had
+spent the night in visiting the saloons of Kokomo, and in the early
+morning began to fire their pistols and guns off in the street, and
+continued to do so until Andy Sutton, marshal of Kokomo, attempted to
+arrest them, but failed, "as he was quickly covered by two rifles."
+Mr. Brown, a police officer, asked Huggins to put up his pistol, and,
+to encourage him, proceeded to pocket his own revolver, when Huggins
+took deliberate aim with a 38-calibre Colt and shot Brown in the left
+breast, just above the heart. Huggins and Foote started for Recene.
+The marshal of Kokomo followed quickly in pursuit, with a large body
+of men. Huggins refused to surrender, whereupon the marshal shot him
+in the face. As there was a movement to lynch him, Al. Huggins was
+sent under strong guard to Leadville, but Foote escaped. "Brown was
+not dead by last accounts, but was not expected to live long." Then
+came a long account of another "Denver tragedy. Charles Stickney
+murders Mr. T. Campan and Mrs. H. O. Devereux in a boarding-house."
+Stickney was nephew of ex-Governor Clifford, of Rhode Island, served as
+lieutenant, 20th Regiment, in the war of 1861-4, graduated at Harvard,
+became principal of a school, married a lady whom he sent to London
+to study music, and tried mining whilst his wife was giving music
+lessons in Denver. There she met Mr. Campan, one of the best families
+in Detroit; Stickney shot him and killed a woman who was in the room
+at the same time. "Public opinion is in favour of Stickney, and he will
+probably be reprimanded." The evening of the day we reached Leadville,
+"Alderman Johnnie M'Combe, a leading candidate for lieutenant-governor
+and mayor, and last spring before the people for city treasurer,"
+shot and wounded, probably fatally, a well-known actor named James
+M'Donald, because the latter had taken some children in M'Combe's
+buggy for a drive. It is not easy to determine how far Johnnie's chance
+of office may be affected by this ebullition, but the newspapers did
+not write of it with harshness; one gave it a comic character by the
+heading, "Ex-Alderman M'Combe attempts to perforate Jemmy M'Donald's
+cranium." In my morning paper of the same date I find that "James Hogan
+was foully murdered by James M'Cue in the open streets of Erie this
+afternoon in a quarrel about a handkerchief;" that Dr. Flemings, a
+prominent citizen of Portland, Ashley County, Arkansas, had appeased
+a quarrel between a pedlar named Gillmore and a coloured man very
+effectually, for, "incensed by a remark made by the pedlar, the doctor
+drew a pistol and shot him dead;" that "a prominent business man of
+M'Leansboro' had made a sensation on the streets to-day by hunting
+up, pistol in hand, one of the gay Lotharios of Hamilton County;"
+that "Daniel Keller, deputy county clerk, was stabbed and killed in
+the street of Virginia City by Dennis Hennessy, a kerbstone broker;"
+that "a searching party under Captain Leper had overhauled Hamilton,
+Myers and Brown, the outlaws who shot Sheriff Davis and Collector
+Hatter at Poplar Bluff, Mo.; killed Hamilton, mortally wounded Myers,
+and made Brown a prisoner;" that "James Hurd shot Jeff Anderson at
+Alamosa, Col., and that it was feared the latter would not survive."
+An account of the death of "Curly Bill," a notorious desperado, leader
+of cowboys and murderer of Marshal White, who was killed at Caleyville,
+Arizona, by his comrade, Jem Wallace, followed. They had a quarrel (of
+course, in a saloon). After a few drinks "Curly Bill" said, "I guess
+I will kill you on general principles." Wallace stepped out of the
+saloon and immediately opened fire, inflicting a mortal wound on his
+foe. After a brief hearing Wallace was discharged, and left for parts
+unknown. Then it was related how "Thomas Clarey ('Tommy the Kid'), a
+Durango outlaw, was killed by a comrade named Eskridge at Annego while
+drunk." A fratricide and three trials for murder were duly recorded.
+Another paper gave an account of South-West Colorado from the lips
+of a recent visitor to San Juan County. "Are you going back to San
+Juan? No, I think not; but it is a glorious country. The men there
+are a little rough, and kill each other on slight provocation; but a
+peaceable man who does not swagger and blow is not molested. There is
+no law, and courts and constables are unknown." He narrates how Aleck
+----, acting as a barkeeper, "a noble-hearted, jovial fellow, full of
+fun, who looked you square in the eye, owns mines, said to be worth
+a million," settled a difficulty; I am inclined to think Mr. Charles
+Klunk rather drew on the interviewing reporter of the _Globe Democrat_.
+He was, he said, going to see a stockman who lived about fifty miles
+from the house where he was visiting. A farmer said to him "Come and
+take a drink with me, and I'll show you the barkeeper who killed the
+man you are going to see an hour ago." The stockman had come into
+the saloon whilst Aleck was in the back room, and began to abuse him.
+Aleck heard him, opened on the man with a revolver, and "shot him full
+of holes. Next day I asked him what he was going to do about it, and
+he said he had been tried and acquitted, which meant that some of the
+leading men had told him that he had done right. There was no trial
+about it. When a man kills another out there in a fight they don't
+inquire very strictly into the circumstances, but make up their minds
+that they can't bring the dead man to life by hanging the killer, so
+nothing is done about it. But when a man murders another to rob him,
+the vigilants turn out and have no mercy on him. They just fill his
+skin with lead and tumble him into a hole like a wolf. After all,
+though the bears are plentiful in the spring, you can kill a deer 100
+yards from the house where you like, the streams are alive with trout,
+the vegetables and crops splendid." Mr. Charles Klunk's resolution not
+to go back to this Happy Valley seems founded on sound constitutional
+principles. What I wish to point out is the condition in which the
+Central Government and State Governments have permitted many districts
+of New Mexico, Colorado, and California to remain. It is plain that
+the peculiar conditions under which the sway of the United States has
+been extended over the regions of the Far West have rendered it very
+difficult to establish the machinery for protecting life and property
+and punishing crime; but I do not see that the statesmen at Washington
+or the legislators at the State capitals are very much concerned at
+the reign of terror which prevails on the borders, or that they seek
+to impress on their people any regard for the sacredness of life. In
+fact, human life is almost a drug in the market. And I write fully
+sensible of the failures of our own and of all European Governments to
+repress crime, to prevent violence, and to ensure security to life and
+property. I am aware that Ireland and Poland are to the fore, and that
+wife-beating and "running kicks" illustrate the brutality of Lancashire
+and other districts--that London has its Alsatias, that every European
+capital has foul recesses in which the only laws are those of crime.
+All the world is busy preparing shoals of emigrants for the United
+States. It is only, however, when some savage outbreak affrighting the
+propriety of a great city arouses indignation and fear that there is
+a clamour for measures of repression. I do not think there is in any
+other part of the world, or that there ever has been in any civilised
+country, such shootings as have filled the land to which I allude with
+bloodshed. It may be said with truth that there never have been and
+that there are not any similar conditions in the world. But the absence
+of any great abiding movement for the correction and suppression of
+violence and lawlessness cannot be so readily accounted for or excused.
+There appears to be a sort of admiration for these border ruffians
+among portions of the American Press and public. Even a staid paper
+like the _Republican_, in an article headed "South-East Missouri: the
+Reign of Lawlessness about Ended," on the destruction of the New Madrid
+gang, writes of one who was sent to the penitentiary for thirty years
+"as a living monument of a bold and brave lot of desperate men who had
+started out to make money by robbing their fellow-men. This swift and
+stern justice speaks well for this portion of the States, which has had
+for a long time more than its full quota of these lawless characters.
+Myers and Brown will be hung on the 15th July, and their execution will
+be witnessed by thousands of South-East Missourians." The spectacle
+of the hanging will not do much good, if it be like the execution at
+Colorado Springs, which was advertised as a sort of picnic or pleasure
+excursion. One advertisement ran, "After the hanging to-morrow drink
+La Salle beer; it will cool your nerves." "Highway robbery here has
+about run its course, and the people are determined that lawlessness
+in those regions shall no longer go unwhipped of justice." Very good.
+But, why not sooner and long ago? "Rhodes was hung by Judge Lynch
+when captured at the killing of young Laforge in New Madrid;" but the
+gang killed the sheriff and wounded the deputy-sheriff and collector
+before the people arose in their majesty to squelch them. A criminal
+is invested with a notoriety which, next to popular estimation, is
+valued by some men, and it is noted with interest that "Gilbert" (one
+pitiless murderer) is a Catholic, and that "Rosengrants" (another
+homicide) "inclines towards the Episcopalians." A Leadville doctor
+visits one of them to ask for his body. "No, sirree, you can't have
+my body; I'll be hanged first!" And the public laugh at the lively
+sally, and admire the _sangfroid_ of the wit! In fact, there is a
+_tendresse_ for crime in this grim humour. A Texan who would "fill the
+skin" of a stranger "with lead" for aspersing Texas would no doubt
+heartily enjoy the description of the early population of the Lone
+Star State, which I quote from the Texas Press. "In the early days
+of the Republic, and even after annexation, many of the white men who
+came here had strong sanitary reasons for a change of climate, having
+been threatened with throat disease so sudden and dangerous that the
+slightest delay in moving to a new and milder climate would have been
+fatal, the subjects dying of dislocation of the spinal vertebrae at the
+end of a few minutes--and a rope. A great many left Arkansas, Indiana,
+and other States in such a hurry that they were obliged to borrow the
+horses on which they rode to Texas. They mostly recovered on reaching
+Austin, and many invalids began to feel better and consider themselves
+out of danger as soon as they crossed the Brancos River. Some who would
+not have lived twenty-four hours longer had they not left their homes
+reached a green old age in Western Texas, and were never again in risk
+of the bronchial affection already referred to by carefully avoiding
+the causes which led to their trouble. Some at Austin recovered so
+far as to be able to run for office, within a year, though defeated
+by a respectable majority, owing to the atmosphere and the popularity
+of the other candidate." The most extraordinary fact connected with
+the indulgence which is extended to Western excesses is the severity
+with which Northern and Eastern writers and publicists deal with
+the recklessness of Southerners with regard to life, as if it were a
+political question in some way connected with slavery. In an article on
+"Colonisation," in the July number of 'The International Review,' there
+is an attempt to prove that the prevalence of homicide in the South as
+compared with the North has impeded the flow of immigrants, although
+slavery has disappeared, and the writer, quoting Mr. Redfield's book
+on 'Homicide North and South,' says the terrible "scourge of open
+murder, wholly irrespective of political causes more deadly than
+disease or yellow fever, because each death is the result of a heinous
+crime, seems to be calmly accepted by public opinion as a part of
+the unchangeable conditions of social life in the South. In Kentucky
+more men are killed in six days than in eight years in Vermont. In a
+village of Connecticut a death from homicide has never occurred from
+its foundation, while in one graveyard in Owen County, Kentucky, the
+majority are murdered men, and in another county forty-two persons
+were killed and forty-three wounded in two years." But in the very same
+number of the 'International' there is an account of the doings of the
+"Vigilance Committee" of San Francisco (where there were no slaves and
+where there is immense wealth), which might cause the author of the
+paper on "Colonisation" to reflect a little on his theories. Surely in
+Arizona, California, &c., where the foreign population is 50 per cent.
+of the natives, immigration has not been checked by the prevalence of
+homicide? It must not be supposed that there is no "law" in the towns
+where these crimes have been committed; in all the cases referred to
+the coroner did his office and verdicts were returned, and it will have
+been seen that "wretches hang" in due course. We had intended to visit
+the State prison at Canyon City on our way to Pueblo from Leadville,
+where we were promised an opportunity of seeing "thirty murderers all
+in a row," but the delay of the train on the road deprived us of the
+means of verifying the statement, and I give it as it was made. It
+would seem as if the criminal supply were super-abundant, or that death
+on the gallows had no deterrent influence. The chances of escape are,
+if not numerous, at least considerable. At Deming, Denver, Leadville,
+Tucson, Tombstone, and other cities, the vast mass of the inhabitants
+are law-abiding, peaceable, honest, and honourable men, who feel as
+much horror at the violence and bloodshed around them as the most
+refined lady in any saloon of Boston, Paris, or London, but they appear
+to endure these things in the hope that the law will be enforced at
+last; now and then they break into vigilance committees and execute
+their own decrees, though the judges do not fail to lay it down that
+they have been accessories to murder. The great civiliser and police
+agent is the railroad. It is affirmed that as the iron way is pushed on
+the outlaws and the _personnel_ of outlawry congregate at the terminal
+town, but I suspect that there is a fringe of the material left on the
+border as it runs. As our party were at dinner in the palace-car one
+evening the train pulled up at a station. There was a group of rough
+men on the platform, who stared in with all their eyes at the white
+tablecloth, set with bright glass and silver, and at the cheerful faces
+under the lamps. "How merry they are. I wonder if they know that this
+is Dodge City?" exclaimed one of the crowd. I was told by an official
+that when they were making a railway in these parts the surveyors, &c.,
+were much troubled by gangs of gamblers and robbers, who impeded the
+work and debauched the men, so after due warning they made a razzia
+on the gamblers, shot a lot of them, and the rest "vamosed." There was
+not very long ago an actual war in the Grand Canyon Valley between the
+Atchison, Topeka, and Santa Fe Railway and the Denver and Rio Grande
+Railway, in which there was an array of armed forces and fighting on
+both sides, and we saw with our own eyes the remains of the breastworks
+cast up in the Grand Canyon by the belligerents. The law came in at
+last. "One side got at the judge first and gave him $50,000. The
+other was quite ready to go beyond that, but the first was too quick,
+and the suit went against the company." I was talking to a lawyer
+about the length of time which is allowed by the judges to criminals
+sentenced to death as a detail of the execution of the law not in
+accordance with the general practice of civilised nations, when one
+of the company remarked, "They must do it, sir, to please the people.
+If we had Judas Iscariot in gaol to-morrow there would be thousands
+of petitions to commute his sentence, and thousands of dollars ready
+for an appeal to the Supreme Court. Our people don't like prompt
+sentence." Nevertheless, sentence and execution are pretty swift when
+the desperadoes take the law into their own hands, as we have seen.
+The revolver and the "saloon" are the agents and the scene in most of
+these murders, and whisky is too often the motive power. In Kansas it
+is a criminal offence to sell any intoxicating spirit, or to use it
+except on medical certificate. It is said that the law cannot last, but
+it surely was a very strong conviction of the evils which were endured
+by the community that brought a State Legislature, elected by the
+people, to enact that beer, wine, and spirits should be absolutely and
+entirely banished from its borders. Lately there was a prosecution by
+the State attorney of a man for selling spirits. The case was clearly
+proved. The judge charged the jury in the strongest manner against the
+defendant. The jury without retiring at once found a verdict of "not
+guilty." "Boys," exclaimed the judge, putting his hand on the foreman's
+shoulder, "Boys, I'm quite with you." The Kansas case will be, I think,
+watched with great interest by the rival parties in England, and it is
+certainly worth investigation and attention, for, if all I hear be true
+here, a Parliament elected by the people either in advance or in the
+rear of their constituents have passed a law which judges condemn, and
+juries evade, and public opinion derides.
+
+From a British, which may be an unintelligent, point of view, there
+is a want of logical method in the treatment of the Great Rebellion
+question by Americans. There is a general disposition to speak of the
+war between the Federal Government and the people of the Confederate
+States as an historical fact which has ceased to present burning
+controversies and terrible issues to the Republic. But, at the same
+time, these controversies are kept alive, and, for the defeated, are
+stirred up incessantly by anniversaries and celebrations, natural but,
+if it be the object of Americans, as many of them assure us it is,
+to let the memory of the past die out like that of a horrid dream,
+impolitic. The spirit which animated the Southern States is neither
+dead nor sleeping. But there are no end of G. A. P. and G. A. R.
+Associations flourishing their banners and waving their sheathed swords
+in and out of the newspapers, and it is almost more than Southern
+flesh and blood can bear at times to be reminded of the defeats they
+sustained, even if they be content to admit that the doctrine of the
+sovereignty of States was a delusion, and that the indivisibility of
+the Republic was a fundamental principle of the Constitution before it
+was conclusively established by force of arms.
+
+North and South, our good cousins are fond of anniversaries and
+speechmakings. I wonder where they get their taste for them from?
+Some few veterans dine together on anniversaries of old French war
+days, and there is a Balaclava Dinner in the Old Country; but, though
+we have a reasonably long list of fighting successes to commemorate,
+their anniversaries are mostly left to the almanacks. The other day
+the Americans had a celebration of the Battle of Cowpens, wherein the
+heroic Morgan gave the diabolical Tarleton the deuce of a whipping. I
+wonder if it was worth remembering? But it is better to remember such
+things perhaps than Sherman's Raid or Wilderness--or Chickahominy.
+There are bitternesses enough remaining--the rivalries and jealousies
+of generals are still active and these memories might be left to die
+out.
+
+The great war which so deeply moved the population of the United States
+has left many traces in Soldiers' Homes, and men deprived of legs or
+arms, or bearing marks of indelible wounds, are to be met with wherever
+there is any considerable gathering of people all over the Union. The
+clerk at the bar of the hotel, to whom we were talking a moment ago,
+was a captain in a regiment of militia, and served with distinction,
+having risen to the grade he occupies by conduct and courage during the
+war; and if he is known among his friends by the title of "Colonel,"
+he deserves, probably, the brevet conferred upon him by the authority
+of the general public around him. The conductor of the train on the
+Pennsylvania Railroad, to whose attention we were so much indebted, was
+an ex-officer of volunteers, was engaged at the first battle of Bull
+Run, where he was wounded, and in several other actions. And our good
+friend the Major, who enabled us to pass many an hour listening to his
+admirable rendering of negro minstrelsy, bore in his body a proof of
+the dangers he had passed, in the shape of a Confederate bullet, or
+it might have been (for I am not quite sure now) a projectile of the
+Federal persuasion. And so on. Scarcely a day passed that we did not
+meet someone who had been fighting on one side or the other.
+
+One great change has come over Americans since I was last here, and,
+whether it was the ridicule to which they were exposed or to a sense
+of their greatness as a nation that it be due, it is to be commended.
+Except by a professional interviewer, not one of the party was asked,
+"What do you think, sir, of our country?"!
+
+The welcome which an Englishman who is entitled to admission into
+good society receives all over the States, in the best houses, and
+from the best men, is as gracious and warm as ever. It seems as if a
+reaction against the suspicion, jealousy, and harshness which marred
+the political relations of the Republic and Great Britain in times gone
+by, moved those who behave with so much courtesy to Englishmen, and
+that they seem to say, _sotto voce_, "Come and see how I forget the
+wrongs done to the United States by the Ministers of George III. and
+his successors! Admit that I can be as magnanimous as I am rich and
+cultivated! I am of your house, but I have transplanted all the good
+qualities of your race to American soil, and grafted them on the tree
+of liberty which towers aloft in all the splendour of Transatlantic
+luxuriance above us."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE RED MAN AND HIS DESTINY.
+
+ Captain Pratt--Carlisle Barracks--An Indian Bowman--The Indian
+ Question--The Pupils' Gossip--The "School News"--Indian
+ Visitors--The White Mother--The India Office--White and
+ Red--Quo Quousque?--Indian Title Deeds--The Reservations--The
+ Indian Agencies--Missionary Efforts--The Red Man and the
+ Maori.
+
+
+On the 5th of May the party visited Carlisle Fort or Barracks, one of
+the ancient military establishments of the Republic, where in the old
+times, speaking in an American sense, a considerable force was usually
+concentrated to keep watch and ward over the western frontiers, now
+extended thousands of miles away to the Pacific. The Barrack, which
+is a large quadrangle capable of containing a couple of regiments, is
+appropriated by the Government to this great experiment, the systematic
+education of the Indians of both sexes, whose families send them to
+school for the purpose of learning English and useful arts, mechanical
+and other, which may be of advantage to their people. It was, perhaps,
+one of the most interesting of the many little excursions which the
+Duke of Sutherland and his friends made in the States, and as it was
+the only one of the schools which we had an opportunity of seeing I
+shall proceed to give a little account of what we witnessed. In the
+first place let me express the sense which every one of us entertained
+of the real sterling qualities of Captain Pratt who is in charge of
+the school, and of the devotion and solicitude for their charges of
+those ladies employed in the training establishment. It may be asked
+how casual visitors could judge of these things? The discipline,
+order, progress, and perfect method visible in every room, and the
+intelligence and good understanding between the teachers and the pupils
+which could be perceived throughout the establishment, were adequate
+proofs, I think, that the praise is well deserved. At the time of our
+visit there were something under three hundred pupils, of whom perhaps
+two hundred were boys, and these were engaged in their class-rooms,
+each section of Indians being arranged according to nationality, if
+such a term can be used. But, indeed, the tribes of Indians differed
+from each other in personal appearance far more than do the races
+which inhabit the European continent. It is true they nearly all have
+straight wire-like black hair and eyes set deeply and rather obliquely
+in faces which are frequently of the Mongol type. But there is great
+diversity in the shape of the head, the angle of the jaw, the formation
+of the mouth and nose, the colour (when not tainted or "improved" by
+an admixture of European blood, whether Mexican or American or other)
+being pretty uniform, a rich bronze, with something of a copper hue,
+predominating in the young people. The boys were dressed in a plain
+neat uniform of greyish-blue, military tunics and trousers, well shod
+and comfortably equipped in all respects. The girls, amongst whom,
+perhaps, taste for eccentric finery was not unobservable, wore dresses
+less uniform in appearance, generally neat and always clean; but
+their foot gear was rather eccentric. The rooms, spacious barrack-like
+apartments, well ventilated, were appropriated to the classes according
+to age and progress, the boys being separated from the girls. The walls
+were hung with maps and furnished with educational coloured prints, and
+boards for arithmetical exercises were in each apartment. The desks and
+stools were such as would be seen in an ordinary school, and if one had
+not looked at the faces of the pupils and been struck by some of the
+strange characters on the walls he would have thought himself in the
+middle of some ordinary school; save, perhaps, that his ear would have
+missed the curious humming noise which marks the industry of idleness
+or of legitimate work in similar establishments in Europe. But here
+were all these young savages, poring over their books or boring with
+their pens, looking up at the visitors scarcely with curiosity and
+applying themselves again to their work, or answering questions put
+to them with the composure which must be a portion of the Red Man's
+nature.
+
+I cannot recollect how many tribes there were represented at the
+Carlisle school; but I was struck by the race-distinctions which could
+be observed when Captain Pratt, standing on a raised platform, called
+out the names of each tribe. The little batches, in some instances
+only one or two, stood up briskly and looked somewhat proudly about,
+as much as to say, "We are Sioux (or Apaches, or Ponchas, or Creeks),
+not like these other fellows." And the young ladies were, if one might
+judge from their expression, quite as proud of their own people as the
+boys. But the names these poor children receive are ludicrous. Not
+content with calling them by English names, or American, singularly
+misapplied, very often, as a name may be, their own Indian nomenclature
+is translated into English, so that we heard reading and reciting
+beside "Luke Phillips" and "Almarine McKillip" (a Scotch Creek)
+"Maggie Stands-looking" and "Reuben Quick-bear." There was something
+of sarcasm, I think, in the address of a Creek boy to the visitors. He
+said: "The Indian boys had come here to learn something about the use
+of the bow and hunting. Their people believed that if boys grew up to
+manhood without learning they would be of no use; therefore they had
+sent the boys here to get education." Then, after some moral if trite
+reflections, the lad said: "You must understand that nearly everything
+that was made was made both for the present and the future. This
+barracks was not built for Indians, as I do not think the men who built
+it ever thought that it would be an Indian school; but things were made
+to do good both in the present and in the future." And then quoth he,
+looking at his white friends straight in the face: "The education which
+we are getting here is not like our own land, but it is something that
+cannot be stolen nor bought from us." And the white man did not turn
+red at the words! I do not pretend to judge of the actual progress made
+in learning, but the very intelligent self-possessed teachers reported
+uniformly that they were satisfied. The most useful education, perhaps,
+which these Indians receive is in practical mechanics, and a visit to
+the workshops attached to the barracks was amply repaid by the sight
+of these industrious young fellows hammering and leathering away in
+the various departments. They have actually completed waggons of a most
+satisfactory construction, complete in all their parts, so much so that
+orders have been received for as many as can be supplied for the use
+of Agencies. They make and repair their own shoes. They have sent out
+a hundred and twenty double sets of harness. They make coffee-boilers,
+cups, pans, pails, and all the articles known to the tin-smith; and the
+girls are taught to hem and sew and knit in the English fashion; but it
+must have been not many a long year before the white man landed, when
+the ancestors of these Indian maidens exercised the same mystery with
+fine sinew and skin in the wonderful work of which specimens are handed
+down to us to-day. On one point alone, perhaps, there was something to
+regret; the health of the children was not all that could be desired.
+Well clad, regularly fed, I presume on wholesome food, cleanly lodged
+in well-ventilated rooms, these wild children of the plains scarcely
+came up to the expectations one would form of them in the matter of
+chest-measurement; and although many were remarkable for fine physical
+development, Captain Pratt confessed that their sanitary condition was
+not everything that could be desired, and that losses from consumption
+and other causes were rather serious. But they have plenty of out-door
+exercise. They have games in which they rejoice. They drill and
+march to the sound of their own band, a very good brass band of eight
+performers, each of a different tribe, who played "Hail Columbia!"
+and the "Star-Spangled Banner," and the like, with energy and zest;
+nay, with harmonious concurrence. When we went out into the large open
+square, there appeared before us a wonderful being in feathers, waving
+plumes, wampum and all the leathern panoply and peltry adornments of
+an Indian, painted, and armed with bow and arrow, probably such an one
+as Captain John Smith may have seen as he went exploring the woods
+of Virginia on his way to the sacrifice from which he was saved by
+Pocahontas. A target was erected at a distance of a hundred yards or
+so, and had I been in the centre of it, I should have been perfectly
+safe from the arrows which the Indian warrior discharged at it. But
+we were told that with a good bow a strong-armed Indian will drive an
+arrow right through a buffalo, and in that case I would suppose that
+the buffalo was very near to him indeed.
+
+Of course it is but natural to find very varying degrees of
+intelligence amongst the pupils, and the rate of progress was by no
+means uniform, but a committee of examination which recently visited
+the school declared that the manifestations of advancement in the
+rudiments of English education were to them simply surprising. It was
+with admiration bordering on amazement they observed the facility and
+accuracy with which the children passed through the various exercises,
+in reading, geography, arithmetic, and writing, of the schoolroom;
+the accurate training and the amount of knowledge displayed were, they
+reported, the fullest proof not only of skilful teaching, but of great
+aptitude and diligence on the part of the children. Considering the
+brief period during which the school had been in operation, and the
+fact that the children entered it in a wholly untutored condition,
+the evidence was conclusive of the capability of culture. They go on
+to say: "We are fully persuaded that improvement equal to that which
+we have witnessed in the case of these children of the plains, if
+made in equal time by American children, would be regarded as quite
+unusual. And when the difficulty of communication consequent upon the
+diversities of language is taken into account we can but feel that the
+results of which we have been the witnesses to-day justify our judgment
+of them as amazing."
+
+One of the most interesting features connected with the attempts
+to educate the Indians at Carlisle is the 'School News,' a little
+publication which, as I understand, is conducted by Indian pupils
+taught in the establishment, edited by Samuel Townsend, a Pawnee Indian
+boy. It is published once a month, and costs 25 cents or 1_s._ per
+year. It takes as its motto the lines:
+
+ "A pebble cast into the sea is felt from shore to shore,
+ A thought from the mind set free will echo on for ever more."
+
+Perhaps neither the metre nor the actual statement commend themselves
+to acceptance, but the matter of the little journal is full of
+interest. In the first place the names of the contributors afford
+full matter for meditation. Perhaps it is one of the steps which
+must be taken to civilise these poor Indians that their names should
+undergo a strange and, to me, unmeaning metamorphose. There seems no
+reason whatever why the Indian names should not be retained, or if
+there is any reason for changing them, at least there might be some
+discrimination and good taste exercised in the adoption of English
+Christian names.
+
+The first number of the 'School News,' which I have before me, contains
+as an article: "What Michael Burns, an Apache boy, thinks on the Indian
+Question." He says, "I cannot help myself, having much feeling for my
+people, what has been said about them, and the efforts making to give
+us the same privileges as the people of the United States. And it is
+said how we have been treated by the bad white man, for the last ten
+or fifteen years, decreasing our number. But that kind for treatment
+for my nation will soon stop." The poor boy goes on to say: "There is
+no doubt that we are in fault. We had the opinion that we could not
+get beaten by any other nation. Now we know for ourselves that we will
+have to change.... But how does the white man know which way is the
+best to do. Was he born that way? No! Education gives him the light
+of knowledge." Then a boy named Marcus Poko writes to his father: "I
+want you to try hard and leave the Comanche way, and to find the white
+man's way." In the leading article, written, I presume, by Samuel
+Townsend, it is said: "Indian ways will never be good any more, it
+is all passed, gone away, and the other way is coming up to take the
+place. We shall all be glad when we all get into the civilised way of
+living, then the Indians will not make so much trouble for the American
+people. Some people say 'let the Indians get out of the way. There
+is no use in trying to advance them, kill them all they are like the
+wild animals deaf and dumb, they never will learn anything. We have
+already paid so much money for them they have never become civilised
+yet.' But all good people say, 'Oh, yes, give them an education and
+plenty of opportunities, and send more teachers among them so they may
+come up beside us and live as brothers and live in peace.'" There is a
+little paragraph as to language. "There are a great many words in the
+English," says the writer, "that the Indians have no word for, so the
+white people who make the Indian books have to make new Indian words.
+So the Indians have to learn the new Indian words. Now we don't know
+much about it, but we believe the Indians can all learn to speak the
+same as the whites." Then there is a column about the school news:
+"Lizzie McRae, a Creek girl, made a very good corn bread the other
+day. We had some of it. It was right good I tell you." "Robert American
+Horse is a steady boy. He works in the blacksmith shop very well, and
+Mr. Harris never has to tell him but once how to do something." "One
+of the teachers had artificial violets on her belt. A Gros Ventre boy
+saw them, but did not know what they were, so he got up from his desk
+and went close to the teacher. He looked at it and then smelt it. When
+he smelt it he said, 'Pooh! rags!'" "Boys, some time ago Captain Pratt
+gave us advice about throwing stones at birds. Some of the boys who
+understand most English did not listen. We want the birds to come and
+stay with us and sing for us, too. Let us remember about this, and
+not let Captain Pratt have to say it again." "Last Sunday some of the
+large girls had a prayer-meeting in the yard at the back of the girls'
+quarters. Nobody told them to do it, but they thought it would be a
+good thing." There is a long letter from Lizzie Walton, a Pawnee girl
+of thirteen years old, describing a trip to Philadelphia, and I believe
+there are very few girls of thirteen years of age in any school who
+could write more amusingly or better. The account of a magic lantern by
+Ada Bent, a Cheyenne girl, closes the number.
+
+Letters from the children who are sent out to the farmers are published
+in this little periodical, and give a very pleasing picture of the
+lives and aptitudes of these Indians. Virginia, of Kiowar, writes from
+a farm, asking one of the teachers to pardon her for not having done so
+before; but "I have not much time," she says, "I am very busy set the
+table and wash dishes make my bed and make pies and cakes and try to
+make bread too, and the other things beside.... Sometime I make fire
+and bring in wood. Mrs. Borton is very kind lady she has two children
+one girl and boy. I love these little children very much." "My dear
+Miss H----, I am not bad a girl. I help now a great deal. I pray for
+you almost every night, also when I wake up in the morning. I like to
+pray very much because I make myself good." And so on in a pleasant
+little gossiping way, frequently in very difficult language. There is
+an article in the 'School News' of July upon the shooting of President
+Garfield: "The man who shot him," says the writer, "we suppose, thought
+he would please some of the people in the United States. He thought he
+was very smart. If President were to die how would every white man,
+black man and the Indian feel? It was not in war when the President
+was shot, for our country don't have war any more, but in peace....
+We all feel sorry because the President is suffering. We hope he
+will soon recover." It is stated that about a hundred boys and girls
+have gone out to work on the farms, and there are some trite remarks
+about the advantages of hard work as opposed to the disadvantages of
+laziness. "The farmers up country say the Indian boys can bind wheat
+first-rate." "Nelly Cook, Sioux, made 36 sheets in one day last week.
+Nellie Cary, Apache, made 32, and Ella Moore, Creek, made 30. Boys, do
+you think those girls are lazy?" The 'School News' has a reporter, it
+would appear, for the paper says that "Our reporter took a walk round
+in the shops to see what the boys were doing. In all the shops every
+boy was busy. In the carpenter shop there were Jock (Arapahoe), Ralph
+(Sioux), Elwood (Iowa), and Joe Gun (Ponca) sawing out window and door
+frames. Oscar (Cheyenne) and Michael Burns (Apache) were busy carving
+balcony posts; and Lester (Arapahoe) was outside chiselling a beam.
+These things are all for our new hospital.... Jesse (Arapahoe) and
+Little Elk (Cheyenne) were busy in the gymnasium. The waggons which
+Robert American Horse has finished painting are to be sent to Oregon
+and Washington Territories." It is sometimes difficult to make out
+the meaning of the little prattle which these small people commit to
+the uncertain medium of the English tongue; but, on the whole, it is
+a most interesting and curious study. In one respect these children
+of the forest possess that which civilisation seems rather to dwarf
+amongst men of the highest culture and imagination--a certain stately
+eloquence and nobility of expression, in which natural images abound,
+and allegory and metaphor consort together in excellent and tasteful
+union. In a paper called 'Eadle Keatah Toh,' which seems to have been
+the precursor of the 'School News,' there is an interesting report
+from the Committee on Indian Affairs to the House of Representatives,
+submitted by Mr. Pound. The motto of the paper is "God helps those
+who help themselves"; but surely it might be better put that God will
+help those who seek to do good to the unfortunate Indians, who in
+contact with civilisation are rendered utterly helpless, and who in
+their attempts to help themselves according to the manner of the race
+must meet with nothing but extinction. From time to time there are
+notices of deaths. One would like to know who wrote the account of the
+"death of John Renville, son of Gabriel Renville, Chief of the Sisseton
+Sioux." After noticing the circumstances under which he contracted his
+fatal illness--fever, produced by drinking water at a spring on a hot
+day on a march to the camp in Perry County, the writer says:--"'Death
+loves a shining mark,' the poet sang long ago; and in the passing away
+of John Renville from our school we sadly say, how truthfully the poet
+sang.... Through all the days of his sickness his large sorrowful eyes
+had a far-away wondering look, no pain marred the beauty of his brow,
+and his voice as he addressed his sister, who tenderly watched over
+him, was like the trumpet warbling of some mournful bird. Our hearts
+follow the father in deep sympathy as he bears back the body of his
+beautiful boy to the land of the Dakotas for burial."
+
+The Indian chiefs have a right, which they often exercise, of visiting
+these schools as a Board; and there is an account in the Carlisle paper
+of the visit of Spotted Tail, Iron Wing, White Thunder, Black Crow,
+and Louis Robideau from the Rosebud Agency; Red Cloud, American Horse,
+Red Dog, Red Shirt, Little Wound, and Two Strike from the Pine Ridge
+Agency; Like the Bear and Medicine Bull from the Lower Brule Agency;
+Son of the Star, Poor Wolf, Peter Beauchamp, and John Smith from Fort
+Berthold; Two Bears, John Big Head, Grass, Thunder Hawk, and Louis
+Primeau from Standing Rock; Charger and Bull Eagle from Cheyenne River;
+Brother to All and James Broadhead from Crow Creek; Strike the Ree
+and Jumping Thunder from Yankton; Robert Hakewashte and Eli Abraham
+from Santee Agency; Mr. Tackett and his wife and daughter; a daughter
+of Spotted Tail, and others. The meeting of the children with their
+parents is described as being most touching; and sometimes the pupils
+were not recognised, so greatly had they altered. As the chiefs seemed
+unwilling to speak when called upon to do so, there was silence for a
+time till a little girl, who had been about a year and a half at the
+school, expressed her desire to speak in so earnest a way that General
+Marshall permitted her to do so; and so, speaking in her own dialect,
+her words were translated into English and into Sioux. She declared
+that she liked the white man's ways and the white man's language.
+Indian words, she said, were down on the ground, but the white man's
+language was in his head. The chiefs, who listened attentively, seemed
+to understand this curious figure of speech, and nodded their approval.
+And then she enlarged upon the advantage of what she learned, and
+implored the chiefs to send their children to the school, where she
+says she is going to try to be God's daughter. Her words seemed to
+kindle the fire within the chieftains' breasts, for Like the Bear, a
+Sioux, and father of one of the boys at Hampton School, came forward
+and addressed the meeting. "There is no greater power in the world,"
+said he, "than the Great Spirit, and we must listen to Him and do
+what He wants us to do. When the men who were sent out by the Great
+Father the President asked for my children I gave them up. I see you
+are making brains for my children, and you are making eyes for them so
+that they can see. That is what I thank the Great Spirit for, and it is
+that which will make me strong." Then Robert Hakewashte, a chief from
+the Santee Agency, spoke, and said that he wanted schools like that
+which he saw here on his own reservation, and Spotted Tail wished for
+the same thing. "Since I have learned the words of God," he says, "it
+makes no difference to me what is the colour of a man's skin; if he
+walks like a man it is the same. I do not believe God likes the white
+colour only. God likes red and white, for He made them all." And then
+the flood of eloquence was loosened, and an old chief of the Sioux,
+nearly blind, verging on ninety years of age, who had come to see his
+grandson, said: "I grew up a red man, and the things I see here I never
+had a chance to see before. I have heard about the white man's church
+and his religion, and I have heard about the holy house. I have looked
+into them, and I am very much pleased. But there is only one Great
+Spirit we all can worship, and the red men all over the country are
+hearing about it. You are teaching the children to worship the Great
+Spirit. That is a great thing, and I like it. But you have here two
+sons of one father. One is sick. I want you to keep the other." And so
+he carried him away.
+
+The condition of the Red Man who is allowed to exist under the banner
+of the Republic is a subject which has attracted the attention of the
+best and wisest men in the United States. The treatment of the Indians
+is a question of future policy. It is one which must exercise a very
+deep and abiding influence on the whole history of an ancient and
+interesting people. But it is exceedingly difficult to put in a short
+compass its most salient points before those who are unacquainted with
+the nature of the problems to be solved. Comparisons are odious, above
+all places, in America, when they are not to the advantage of the Great
+Republic, and I shall not draw any between the state of the Indian
+tribes in Canada and in the States. But it may be fairly admitted that
+the Indian Question in Canada is divested of many of the difficulties
+which surround it south of the lakes. The people of Canada have far
+more land than they know what to do with. They are a sparse population.
+They are not impelled to fierce adventures by mining "booms," and they
+are altogether less progressive than their American brethren. Shall we
+say that they are more charitable, more humane, less greedy of other
+men's goods? I do not say so. But at all events it is perfectly true
+that the Red Man, although he is dying out under the influence of
+whiskey and other influences which need not be particularised, in his
+native land, lives in comparative peace and comfort under the British
+flag in Canada. He is content with the White Mother. He pursues the
+occupations dear to his race as a hunter and as a fisherman. He is a
+dealer in peltries, and in such small barter as his needs require. He
+is the companion of sportsmen, and he delights, free as mountain air,
+to hunt on the hillside and in the prairie in winter over the vast
+ranges of snowy fields which in the few short months of spring and
+summer teem with flowers, and the frosty lakes which yield fish to his
+spear and net. There are few or no railways through his reservations
+to vex his repose, no great trains of miners with pick and rifle to
+drive away the moose and the buffalo, and hand the native hunter over
+to starvation. The Indian gives to the white man all he needs, and aids
+him in obtaining from the wide stretch of land over which he roams all
+the wealth that it can afford. Practically one part of the Dominion
+is handed over to the Red Man and to the half-breeds, for there is an
+Indian frontier which as yet has not been much encroached upon by any
+large migration of whites. As far as I know, conflicts north of the
+Saint Lawrence between Indians and whites are unknown, or have not
+been heard of for very many years. South of the great lakes, in the
+wonderful land over which is displayed the banner of the stars and
+stripes, the fate of the Indian is very different. In the words of Mr.
+Carl Schurz, himself an expert in the question, "the history of the
+relations of the United States with the Red Man presents in great part
+a record of broken treaties, of unjust wars and of cruel spoliation."
+That is a sweeping statement, which it would be just as well for
+an Englishman not to make, but coming from the mouth of an American
+citizen and of a United States Minister with plenty of evidence to back
+it, there can be no harm in recording my conviction of its truth. It is
+but another indictment against a defect in the form of government which
+Americans exalt as the most perfect of human institutions, that the
+central government made treaties in good faith with the Indian tribes,
+but was unable to enforce their obligations or to maintain their
+integrity. There is, as all well-informed people know--well informed,
+at least, in reference to American affairs--a commissioner who makes an
+annual report to the Secretary of the Interior respecting the Indian
+tribes in the various locations over the Union and the Territories.
+The last of these reports which I have seen is that of the Acting
+Commissioner Mr. Marble, addressed to the Department of the Interior
+from the office of Indian Affairs at Washington in the November of
+last year. The volume contains the reports of the agents in the Indian
+Territory; of the schools for Indian children established in pursuance
+of a wise and humane policy, and detailed statistics in relation to the
+Indian settlements and reservations, the latter indeed forming by far
+the largest portion of the volume of 400 pages. Before I call attention
+to the condition of the Indians, and the efforts made to save them from
+extinction or from a degradation worse than annihilation, I should like
+to direct the attention of those who are interested in the subject
+to the view which is beginning to find favour, I believe, among the
+most experienced men in the States, that the system of "Reservations"
+is founded on a mistake the magnitude of which is demonstrated every
+day, and that the only means of saving the Indians from extinction is
+their gradual absorption as educated communities in the agricultural
+life of the nation, keeping them far as may be from the white man,
+but making no other distinction between them and the other citizens
+of the United States than such as must be found in the nature of the
+Indian race and their degree of culture and civilisation--treating
+them, in fact, as communities of Mennonites, Mormons, or Norwegians,
+or other nationalities would be treated in the United States. When
+the Reservations were first established it was considered impossible
+that the migration of the whites would extend to the remote regions of
+the west to which the unfortunate survivors of the people with whose
+virtues and vices Cooper and other novelists have made us familiar were
+gradually and often remorselessly driven. It is a plea which will be
+urged in bar of judgment that the doctrine of States Rights prevented
+the interference of the United States Government on behalf of the
+Indian tribes who were often ruthlessly destroyed. But it will scarcely
+be a plea, I think, which humanity in full court would recognise as
+valid. _Homo homini lupus._ But to the Red Man as to the Black in many
+cases the White Man is worse than any wolf; far more bloodthirsty and
+rapacious than any tiger--a Cain of Cains. It was our own kith and kin
+who, landing on the shores of the North American continent, encroaching
+by degrees upon the tribes and at last encountering their hostility,
+spread their sway literally by fire and sword, and rooted out the
+Red Man wherever they found him established on land or by sea which
+they coveted. We, whose countrymen have worked out the same policy on
+the Australian continent and Van Diemen's Land, and who can only be
+restrained from its pursuit in New Zealand by the strong arm of the
+Home Government, can scarcely afford to take up stones to fling at our
+American brethren; and it is not with any purpose of indictment or
+accusation that I proceed to make a few remarks on the relations of
+the United States Government with the Red Man, and the efforts which
+they have been making to compensate the Indians in some measure for the
+injustice and persecution dealt out for many a generation.
+
+As I looked at the men gathered at some of the railroad stations in
+the western desert and thought of the Red Men whose fate it is to
+meet such representatives of civilisation and Christianity, I could
+not but be filled with pity for the unfortunates and with wonder at
+"the dispensation" under which they live. The faces are fine and bold
+enough, bearded to the cheek or shaved in the American fashion, with
+bold staring eyes, which "look square" in your own, with a general
+expression "Do you want a fight?" in them--the heads to which they
+belong are generally set on muscular bodies. If a gang of these men
+think fit to go on to an Indian reservation--the very name is too often
+a bitter mockery--who is to stop them? If the Indians try to do so and
+one of the white intruders is killed the country-side rings with cries
+of "vengeance for the massacre of our brethren," and all the papers are
+filled with accounts of "Another Indian Outbreak."
+
+"The average frontier-man in the States looks," as Mr. Schurz says,
+"upon the Indian merely as a nuisance in his way. There are many
+whom it would be difficult to convince that it is a crime to kill an
+Indian." I will go further and say that there are many, I believe, who
+would take great pleasure in killing an Indian whenever they could;
+or as one gentleman observed to me, and I believe in his relations
+with white men no more just or honourable man or more humane could be
+found, "I would sooner kill an Indian than I would a skunk." When I
+was in the West, there was a cry raised that the Utes were about to
+wage war, and appeals appeared in the local papers for a military force
+to march against them. Their leaders were accused of arrogance and of
+insolence, and of murderous designs, and the general remark one heard
+was, "The Utes must go." I inquired a little into the matter when I got
+back, and I found that the Utes were strictly and absolutely, in their
+own right, standing upon the titles, which they had derived from the
+United States Government, to the lands from which they were required
+to move. These lands were wanted. Other lands were pointed out to them,
+to which they objected, and then they were informed that they would be
+moved by force, and preparations were made to levy war against these
+unfortunates, if they resisted deportation from the territory which
+had been assigned to them by the Great Father. Had they been Irish
+landlords, they could not have been treated worse; but in the West not
+one word was raised in favour of their claims.
+
+The first point which has to be considered is, that the Indian is
+obnoxious to the very class of men with whom he is by the necessity
+of things most closely brought in contact. The railway has been the
+great persecutor of Red Men. It has driven away the game, it has
+carried in proximity to their reservations all the enterprise charged
+with whiskey, revolver, rifle, and greed, which can be furnished by
+the offscourings of the world. In the Far West the miners in advance
+throng into the valleys, and break the silence of the mountain-ranges
+by the sound of their picks, the cattle-raisers spread out over the
+plains, the ploughman settles down on the fertile land. "What," asks
+the American philanthropist, and his question is echoed all over the
+world by humane and good men, "what is to become of the Indian?" The
+hunting-grounds are gradually being pushed farther west and north
+until they are bounded by the sea, and by the eternal snow. And if by
+any chance it should be found that there is gold or lead, silver or
+iron, or copper, or coal in any abundance, even under these unpromising
+conditions it will be sought. The buffalo is disappearing fast, faster
+than the Indian himself. Deer are becoming scarcer every year. What
+is to be left for the Red Man? Pastoral life and agriculture, say
+the philanthropists. The substitution, however, is not so easy. The
+weakness of the United States Government is the main cause why the
+policy of reservations has failed. Let us take the account of it by a
+United States Minister. "The Government," says Mr. Schurz, "has tried
+to protect the Indians in good faith against encroachments, and has
+failed. It has yielded to the pressure exercised upon it by people in
+immediate contact with the Indians. When a collision between Indians
+and whites once occurred, no matter who was responsible for it, our
+military forces were always found on the side of the white against the
+savage. How was Government to proclaim that white men should for ever
+be excluded from the millions of acres covered by Indian reservations,
+and that the national power would be exerted to do so?" Such an
+idea the American Minister thinks would be utterly preposterous. The
+rough and ready frontier-man would pick quarrels with the Indians;
+the speculators would urge him on. Government could not prevent
+collisions; the conflict once brought on, Government, in spite of its
+good intentions and sense of justice, would find itself employing its
+forces to hunt down the Indian. The old story would be repeated, as it
+will be wherever, says Mr. Schurz, there is a large and valuable Indian
+Reservation surrounded by white settlements, "and unjust, disgraceful
+as it is, that is an inevitable result." Such being the case then,
+the United States Government being powerless to see that right shall
+be done, and it being at once a human and a Christian duty to avert,
+if possible, the extinction of the original possessors of this grand
+continent, let us see what can be done to carry out the object. Fit the
+Indians, it is said, for the habits and occupations of civilised life;
+give them individual possession of land as property, a fee-simple title
+to the fields they cultivate, guarded by an absolute prohibition of
+sale--because it has been found that whenever the Indians are exposed
+to the temptation of artful traders, they will be cajoled out of the
+titles they have to their land--and you will save the remnants from
+utter destruction. I hope it will be so. I could not but feel a glow
+of enthusiasm when I heard the Attorney-General, Mr. MacVeagh, at
+Washington, speaking incidentally one day about some railway matter,
+declare that he would not sanction the making of a line of railway
+through Indian Territory until he was satisfied that the Indians
+actually understood the conditions which had been offered to them by
+the company. "I will," said Mr. MacVeagh, "send down government agents
+there to ascertain that the Indians thoroughly understand what they
+are doing, and that it is of their own free will and consent that the
+railway passes through their territory in exchange for the money and
+goods they receive for the concession." Excellent and just minister!
+But, alas! I believe that ere I left the United States the whole thing
+was done; the railway company had declared that they would, whether
+or no, make their line, and if an Indian touched a hair of the head of
+any white man, the United States Government would not be able to avert
+the Divine wrath of every white man on the border from the whole of
+the tribe. Well may Mr. Schurz say that the thought of exterminating a
+race once the only occupants of the soil, where so many millions of our
+own people have flourished, must be revolting to every American who is
+not devoid of all sentiments of justice and humanity. Extermination or
+civilisation is the alternative offered to the Indian. Now let us see
+how it is proposed to civilise them. According to the returns in the
+Report for 1880, the number of Indians in the United States, exclusive
+of those in Alaska, is 256,127. Of these, 138,642 are described as
+wearing citizen's dress. It will be observed that there is no estimate
+given of the Indians who do not wear citizen's dress under this head.
+Citizens must be sometimes very badly dressed indeed if the Indians I
+saw at various stations along the line to San Francisco in shocking
+bad hats and tattered clothes were to be included amongst those who
+figured under this description in the report of the Commissioner. About
+17,000 houses are reported as occupied. There are 224 schools, attended
+by 6000 scholars for a month or more during the year, scattered over
+the continent. About 34,550 Indians could read. There were 154 church
+buildings and 74 missionaries. The number of children of school age was
+34,541; but this was an under estimate. Of these there was only school
+accommodation for 9972. The total amount expended for education during
+the year by the United States Government was $249,299; by the State of
+New York, $15,863; by the State of Pennsylvania, $325; by other States,
+nothing; by religious societies, $46,933; by tribal funds, $7481.
+22,048 Indian families were engaged in cultivating farms or small
+patches of ground; 33,125 male Indians were labouring in civilised
+pursuits; and 358 Indian apprentices had been pursuing trades during
+the year. This census and these statistics are stated to be imperfect,
+and it would require a close examination of the returns to enable an
+inquirer to form any idea as to the progress made in the direction
+which we are told is the alternative of destruction.
+
+The Reservations of the various Indian tribes are scattered irregularly
+over the United States; from Michigan, Wisconsin, and Minnesota on
+the north and north-west, away to the Territories on the other side
+of the Rocky Mountains, down to New Mexico and Arizona, there being
+none in the southern states bordering the Atlantic. But there are
+Red Men of different tribes located, as the Americans would say, in
+the States to the east, such as New York. The Reservations are of
+irregular size and extent. Isabella, in the State of Maine, reserved
+for 848 Indians, lies to the east of 86 deg. longitude, and south of 44 deg.
+latitude. There is a considerable group of Reservations on the western
+shore of Lake Michigan in Wisconsin, and in Minnesota. But the proper
+Indian territory lies west of Arkansas, with the Red River on the
+south, New Mexico on the west, and Kansas on the north; and in it are
+concentrated the Cherokees, Choctaws, Chicasaws, Comanches, Cheyennes,
+and several other tribes. The Navajo Reservation in New Mexico and
+Arizona ranks perhaps next in size, extending northwards into Colorado,
+where the Utes have got a large tract of land assigned to them upon
+what appears now to be very doubtful or vanishing tenure. These, and
+numerous reservations, which it would be tedious to enumerate, are
+under the charge of agents appointed by the Government at Washington,
+as to whose functions and personal character and attainments one
+hears very surprising and contradictory reports. But I confess, from
+a perusal of the documents which they have furnished to the head of
+the Department, and which are published in the Annual Report, there
+seems to me no just ground for imputing to these gentlemen want of
+zeal, knowledge, interest, or intelligence. Those who detest the whole
+work of saving the Red Man are very apt to impute to the Indian agents
+not only corrupt practices in relation to the sale of government
+stores and supplies destined for the use of those under their charge,
+but illicit traffic in spirits, which is ruinous to the Red Man, and
+even some participation in the acts of violence which have frequently
+led to Indian troubles. It all depends upon the manner in which your
+informant in the States regards the Indian Question whether the agents
+are described as scoundrels whom no man could trust, or as gentlemen of
+high propriety and general excellence.
+
+The necessities which have been imposed by advancing civilisation
+of providing Indians with food entail a heavy outlay upon the United
+States Government, which is much begrudged by large sections of members
+of Congress, although they do not see their way clearly to withhold
+supplies of food from the unfortunate people whose hunting-grounds have
+been occupied, and who have not yet learned the arts of agriculture,
+so as to be able to supply themselves with food. The transportation of
+stores, the cost of beef, corn, coffee, bread, tobacco, tea; in fact,
+all kinds of food, woollen goods, clothing, boots, hats, groceries,
+waggons, tools, hardware, and medical supplies,--all these duly figure
+in the estimates of the Indian Commissioner to a very considerable
+amount, and the returns as yet do not present any large reduction on
+the annual charge; although nearly all the agents speak in terms of
+great hopefulness of the extraordinary advance which has been made in
+their agencies in the cultivation of the soil.
+
+One remarkable division of the agencies has reference to their
+appropriation to religious denominations. An Indian might well
+be puzzled as to his form of belief if he were passed through the
+various agencies, attending at each a religious service or two, and
+listening to the teaching of the various divines attached to them. The
+Society of Friends have control of the belief and religious teaching
+of the Sante and Nemaja Indians in Nebraska, and of the Pawnees in
+the Indian Territory; to the Methodists are assigned three tribes in
+California, three tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, three
+in Montana, two in Idaho, and one in Michigan. The Nevada Cherokees,
+Creeks, Choctaws, Chicasaws, and Seminoles are handed over to the
+Baptists. The Presbyterians have charge of the Nezperces in Idaho,
+Umtas in Utah; the Apaches, Pueblos, and two other tribes in New
+Mexico. The Congregational Church exercises its religious offices
+among the tribes in Wisconsin, among two tribes in Dacotah, and one
+in Washington Territory. The Reformed Church has its work cut out for
+it in Arizona amongst four tribes. The Protestant Episcopal Church
+exercises its jurisdiction over one tribe in Minnesota, six tribes in
+Dacotah, one in Indian Territory, and one in Wyoming. The Unitarians
+have apparently only one tribe in teaching, the Los Pinos in Colorado.
+The United Presbyterians have one tribe in Oregon; the Christian Union
+has another in Oregon; the Evangelical Lutheran has charge of the
+Southern Utes in Colorado; and lastly, the Roman Catholic Church has
+two tribes in Washington Territory, two in Oregon, one in Montana,
+and two in Dacotah. As a general rule, the reports of the missionaries
+themselves are more sanguine, as they are wont to be, than are those
+of disinterested, perhaps unprejudiced, observers of their work. But,
+as is natural, the actual progress made depends very much, not only
+upon the nature of the tribe among whom the work is carried on, but
+on the character of the missionary, and on his ability and energy. In
+some instances, I see the condition of a tribe is reported as being
+lamentable, from a religious point of view, whilst in a neighbouring
+reservation, it is stated that great progress has been made in the
+establishment of religious teaching and ideas. The Rosebud Agency is
+said to prosper in the hands of one reverend gentlemen; the fathers of
+St. Ignatius are described as doing good work amongst the Flatheads;
+the Pawnees are left without any missionaries at all, and, says
+the government report, "are probably better off without them." And
+depreciatory remarks are slightingly introduced concerning the work at
+other agencies. On the Devil's Lake Agency, the majority of the adults
+shun the missionaries as they would the gentleman who may be supposed
+to own the lake by the sides of which they are encamped. The Jesuit
+fathers and the Catholic sisters are described as working generally
+with zeal and success, whilst one agency assigned to the Methodists
+is said to have no religious agency at all. It is to the success of
+the attempts made to educate the Indians at the public establishments
+that the philanthropist and humanitarian must look with the most
+hopefulness.
+
+All the reports of the teachers and visitors of these schools coincide
+in one point, that the young Indian is most teachable, and that in
+respect of acquiring knowledge he is, if anything, the superior of the
+white, who seems to enjoy no hereditary excellence in his capacity for
+acquiring knowledge. The Bill to which the Report was an introduction
+may be considered indeed as the Magna Charta of the Indian tribes
+if it be followed up by judicious treatment, and careful management
+of and consideration for the rights conferred upon these tribes as
+preliminary to their absorption as citizens in the mass of the nation,
+when they are fit for such an amalgamation with the white races. The
+advance of the United States westwards has left vacant many military
+posts and barracks, stranded, as it were, high and dry in the midst of
+the torrent of civilisation. Fort Bridger, Wyoming; Carlisle Barracks,
+Pennsylvania; Fort Craig, New Mexico; Fort Cummings, in the same
+territory, and a number of others, have been named as suitable for
+the purpose of educating the Indian children; and it was in pursuance
+of the measure recommended to Congress that the various agencies
+throughout the Indian Territories were directed to forward children
+whom their parents might wish to entrust to the officers of the United
+States for education. "Received in the rudest state of savagism," says
+the Report, "their progress is already most remarkable." I have already
+remarked that the health of the boys is not generally satisfactory.
+Their sanitary condition is bad; and it would appear that sometimes in
+these long and tedious journeyings from the remote Indian agencies the
+poor children suffer much.
+
+Even at the present moment the Anglo-Saxon appears to be dealing with
+the Maori in New Zealand very much as he has dealt with the native in
+Tasmania and in Australia. The history of our relations with the New
+Zealand chiefs and people is not in a nature to enable us to throw
+stones at the Americans with impunity, for the glass house in which
+we live can very easily be reached. Some sixteen or seventeen years
+ago a rebellion, arising out of the aggressions of the white settlers
+on the lands of the Maori, was averted by a Proclamation and by Acts
+confiscating a large tract of Tallinassey, which became theoretically
+the property of the Crown. Of course the natives had as little to say
+to that as the lady who is mentioned in 'Tristram Shandy' had with the
+declaration that "she was not related to her own child." But they did
+not recognise the occupancy, and whenever a white man settled upon
+a portion of the ground they pulled down his fences and removed his
+landmarks. The contest is still going on, but no one who is acquainted
+with the history of the colony will doubt what the end will be; and
+it is coming soon, or it is to come, the moment the colonists are bent
+upon taking the land, and when it is desired to do so.
+
+"It but feebly expresses the judgment formed from what we have observed
+to say that we regard the experiment made in this school to educate and
+improve Indian children as in every way a very remarkable success." _Si
+sic omnes!_ Why does not the United States Government, or if not the
+Government, the people, abounding in wealth, full of pious impulses,
+humane, charitable, who justly say that the worst use you can make
+of an Indian is to hang him; why do not the political economists who
+declare that it costs a million of dollars to get rid of an Indian with
+gunpowder and lead; why do not the enterprising and wealthy capitalists
+who desire to appropriate Indian Reservations all combine to extend the
+work of these schools so as to absorb all that remains of the Red Man
+in the rising generation amongst the citizens of the great Republic? A
+blessed work, worthy of an imperial State, truly great and truly good!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+
+
+LONDON:
+
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, LIMITED.
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+A Catalogue of American and Foreign Books Published or Imported by
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+_British Goblins: Welsh Folk-Lore, Fairy Mythology, Legends, and
+Traditions._ WIRT SYKES, United States Consul for Wales. With
+Illustrations by J. H. THOMAS. This account of the Fairy Mythology and
+Folk-Lore of his Principality is, by permission, dedicated to H.R.H.
+the Prince of Wales. Second Edition. 8vo, 18_s._
+
+_Buckle (Henry Thomas) The Life and Writings of._ ALFRED HENRY HUTH.
+With Portrait. 2 vols., demy 8vo.
+
+_Burnaby (Capt.)_ _See_ "On Horseback."
+
+_Burnham Beeches (Heath, F. G.)._ With numerous Illustrations and a
+Map. Crown 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._ Second Edition.
+
+_Butler (W. F.) The Great Lone Land; an Account of the Red River
+Expedition, 1869-70._ With Illustrations and Map. Fifth and Cheaper
+Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _The Wild North Land; the Story of a Winter Journey with Dogs
+across Northern North America._ Demy 8vo, cloth, with numerous Woodcuts
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+
+---- _Akim-foo: the History of a Failure._ Demy 8vo, cloth, 2nd
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+
+
+_Cadogan (Lady A.) Illustrated Games of Patience._ Twenty-four Diagrams
+in Colours, with Descriptive Text. Foolscap 4to, cloth extra, gilt
+edges, 3rd Edition, 12_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Caldecott (R.)._ _See_ "Breton Folk."
+
+_Celebrated Travels and Travellers._ _See_ VERNE.
+
+_Changed Cross (The)_, and other Religious Poems. 16mo, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Child of the Cavern (The); or, Strange Doings Underground._ By JULES
+VERNE. Translated by W. H. G. KINGSTON. Numerous Illustrations. Sq. cr.
+8vo, gilt edges, 7_s._ 6_d._; cl, plain edges, 5_s._
+.
+_Child's Play_, with 16 Coloured Drawings by E. V. B. Printed on thick
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+
+---- _New_. By E. V. B. Similar to the above. _See_ New.
+
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+Illustrations by E. V. B., printed in tint, handsomely bound, 3_s._
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+
+_Choice Editions of Choice Books._ 2_s._ 6_d._ each, Illustrated by
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+G. THOMAS, H. J. TOWNSHEND, E. H. WEHNERT, HARRISON WEIR, &c.
+
+ Bloomfield's Farmer's Boy.
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+ Keat's Eve of St. Agnes.
+ Milton's L'Allegro.
+ Poetry of Nature. Harrison Weir.
+ Rogers' (Sam.) Pleasures of Memory.
+ Shakespeare's Songs and Sonnets.
+ Tennyson's May Queen.
+ Elizabethan Poets.
+ Wordsworth's Pastoral Poems.
+
+"Such works are a glorious beatification for a poet."--_Athenaeum._
+
+_Christ in Song._ Dr. PHILIP SCHAFF. A New Edition, Revised, cloth,
+gilt edges, 6_s._
+
+_Cobbett (William)._ A Biography. By EDWARD SMITH. 2 vols., crown 8vo,
+25_s._
+
+_Confessions of a Frivolous Girl (The): A Novel of Fashionable Life._
+Edited by ROBERT GRANT. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Cradle-Land of Arts and Creeds; or, Nothing New under the Sun._
+CHARLES J. STONE, Barrister-at-law, and late Advocate, High Courts,
+Bombay. 8vo, pp. 420, cloth, 14_s._
+
+_Cripps the Carrier._ 3rd Edition, 6_s._ See BLACKMORE.
+
+_Cruise of H.M.S. "Challenger" (The)._ W. J. J. SPRY, R.N. With Route
+Map and many Illustrations. 6th Edition, demy 8vo, cloth, 18_s._ Cheap
+Edition, crown 8vo, some of the Illustrations, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Curious Adventures of a Field Cricket._ Dr. ERNEST CANDEZE. Translated
+by N. D'ANVERS. With numerous fine Illustrations. Crown 8vo, gilt,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plain binding and edges, 5_s._
+
+
+_Dana (R. H.) Two Years before the Mast and Twenty-Four years After._
+Revised. Edition, with Notes, 12mo, 6_s._
+
+_Daughter (A) of Heth._ W. BLACK. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Day of My Life (A); or, Every Day Experiences at Eton._ By an ETON
+BOY, Author of "About Some Fellows." 16mo, cloth extra, 2_s._ 6_d._ 6th
+Thousand.
+
+_Diane._ Mrs. MACQUOID. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
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+pp., square 16mo, and 22 full-page Illustrations. Cloth, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_Dick Sands, the Boy Captain._ JULES VERNE. With nearly 100
+Illustrations, cloth, gilt, 10_s._ 6_d._; plain binding and plain
+edges, 5_s._
+
+_Dictionary (General) of Archaeology and Antiquities._ From the French
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+
+_Dodge (Mrs. M.) Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates._ An entirely New
+Edition, with 59 Full-page and other Woodcuts. Square crown 8vo, cloth
+extra, 5_s._; Text only, paper, 1_s._
+
+_Dogs of Assize._ A Legal Sketch-Book in Black and White. Containing 6
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+
+
+_Eight Cousins_. _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_Eighteenth Century Studies._ Essays by F. HITCHMAN. Demy 8vo, 18_s._
+
+_Elementary Education in Saxony._ J. L. BASHFORD, M.A., Trin. Coll.,
+Camb. For Masters and Mistresses of Elementary Schools. Sewn, 1_s._
+
+_Elinor Dryden._ Mrs. MACQUOID. Crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+_Embroidery (Handbook of)._ L. HIGGIN. Edited by LADY MARIAN ALFORD,
+and published by authority of the Royal School of Art Needlework. With
+16 page Illustrations, Designs for Borders, &c. Crown 8vo, 5_s._
+
+_English Philosophers._ Edited by IWAN MULLER, M.A., New College,
+Oxon. A Series of Volumes containing short biographies of the most
+celebrated English Philosophers, to each of whom is assigned a separate
+volume, giving as comprehensive and detailed a statement of his views
+and contributions to Philosophy as possible, explanatory rather than
+critical, opening with a brief biographical sketch, and concluding
+with a short general summary, and a bibliographical appendix. The
+Volumes will be issued at brief intervals, in square 16mo, 3_s._ 6_d._,
+containing about 200 pp. each.
+
+The following are in the press:---
+
+=Bacon.= Professor FOWLER, Professor of Logic in Oxford.
+
+=Berkeley.= Professor T. H. GREEN, Professor of Moral Philosophy,
+Oxford.
+
+=Hamilton.= Professor MONK, Professor of Moral Philosophy, Dublin.
+[Ready.
+
+=J. S. Mill.= HELEN TAYLOR, Editor of "The Works of Buckle," &c.
+
+=Mansel.= Rev. J. H. HUCKIN, D.D., Head Master of Repton.
+
+=Adam Smith.= J. A. FARRER, M.A., Author of "Primitive Manners and
+Customs." [Ready.
+
+=Hobbes.= A. H. GOSSET, B.A., Fellow of New College, Oxford.
+
+=Bentham.= G. E. BUCKLE, M.A., Fellow of All Souls', Oxford.
+
+=Austin.= HARRY JOHNSON, B.A., late Scholar of Queen's College, Oxford.
+
+=Hartley.= E. S. BOWEN, B.A., late Scholar of New College, Oxford.
+
+=James Mill.= E. S. BOWEN [Ready.
+
+=Shaftesbury.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+=Hutcheson.= Professor FOWLER.
+
+Arrangements are in progress for volumes on LOCKE, HUME, PALEY, REID,
+&c.
+
+_Episodes of French History._ Edited, with Notes, Genealogical,
+Historical, and other Tables, by GUSTAVE MASSON, B.A.
+
+ =1. Charlemagne and the Carlovingians.=
+ =2. Louis XI. and the Crusades.=
+ =3. Francis I. and Charles V.=
+ =4. Francis I. and the Renaissance.=
+
+The above Series is based upon M. Guizot's "History of France." Each
+volume is choicely Illustrated, with Maps, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Erema; or, My Father's Sin._ _See_ BLACKMORE.
+
+_Etcher (The)._ Containing 36 Examples of the Original Etched work of
+Celebrated Artists, amongst others: BIRKET FOSTER, J. E. HODGSON, R.A.,
+COLIN HUNTER, J. P. HESELTINE, ROBERT W. MACBETH, R. S. CHATTOCK, H. R.
+ROBERTSON, &c., &c. Imperial 4to, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 12_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Eton._ _See_ "Day of my Life," "Out of School," "About Some Fellows."
+
+_Evans (C.) Over the Hills and Far Away._ C. EVANS. One Volume, crown
+8vo, cloth extra, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+---- _A Strange Friendship._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 5_s._
+
+_Eve of Saint Agnes (The)._ JOHN KEATS. Illustrated with Nineteen
+Etchings by CHARLES O. MURRAY. Folio, cloth extra, 21_s._ An Edition
+de Luxe on large paper, containing proof impressions, has been printed,
+and specially bound, 3_l._ 3_s._
+
+
+_Farm Ballads._ WILL CARLETON. Boards, 1_s._; cloth, gilt edges, 1_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Fern Paradise (The): A Plea for the Culture of Ferns._ F. G. HEATH.
+New Edition, entirely Rewritten, Illustrated with Eighteen full-page,
+numerous other Woodcuts, including 8 Plates of Ferns and Four
+Photographs, large post 8vo, cloth, gilt edges, 12_s._ 6_d._ Sixth
+Edition. In 12 Parts, sewn, 1_s._ each.
+
+_Fern World (The)._ F. G. HEATH. Illustrated by Twelve Coloured Plates,
+giving complete Figures (Sixty-four in all) of every Species of British
+Fern, printed from Nature; by several full-page Engravings. Cloth,
+gilt, 6th Edition, 12_s._ 6_d._
+
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+under which they grow naturally, and under which they may be
+cultivated."--_Athenaeum._
+
+_Few (A) Hints on Proving Wills._ Enlarged Edition, 1_s._
+
+_First Steps in Conversational French Grammar._ F. JULIEN. Being an
+Introduction to "Petites Lecons de Conversation et de Grammaire," by
+the same Author. Fcap. 8vo, 128 pp., 1_s._
+
+_Flooding of the Sahara (The)._ _See_ MACKENZIE.
+
+_Food for the People; or, Lentils and other Vegetable Cookery._ By E.
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+Crown 8vo, cloth extra, with numerous Illustrations, 8_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
+_Forbidden Land (A): Voyages to the Corea._ G. OPPERT. Numerous
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+
+_Four Lectures on Electric Induction._ Delivered at the Royal
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+
+_Foreign Countries and the British Colonies._ Edited by F. S. PULLING,
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+the Yorkshire College, Leeds. A Series of small Volumes descriptive
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+Country being treated of by a Writer who from Personal Knowledge is
+qualified to speak with authority on the Subject. The Volumes average
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+3_s._ 6_d._
+
+The following is a List of the Volumes:--
+
+=Denmark and Iceland.= By E. C. OTTE, Author of "Scandinavian History,"
+&c.
+
+=Greece.= By L. SERGEANT, B.A., Knight of the Hellenic Order of the
+Saviour, Author of "New Greece."
+
+=Switzerland.= By W. A. P. COOLIDGE, M.A., Fellow of Magdalen College,
+Editor of _The Alpine Journal_.
+
+=Austria.= By D. KAY, F.R.G.S.
+
+=Russia.= By W. R. MORFILL, M.A., Oriel College, Oxford, Lecturer on
+the Ilchester Foundation, &c.
+
+=Persia.= By Major-Gen. Sir F. J. GOLDSMID, K.C.S.I., Author of
+"Telegraph and Travel," &c.
+
+=Japan.= By S. MOSSMAN, Author of "New Japan," &c.
+
+=Peru.= By CLEMENTS H. MARKHAM, M.A., C.B.
+
+=Canada.= By W. FRASER RAE, Author of "Westward by Rail," &c.
+
+=Sweden and Norway.= By the Rev. F. H. WOODS, M.A., Fellow of St.
+John's College, Oxford.
+
+=The West Indies.= By C. H. EDEN, F.R.G.S., Author of "Frozen Asia," &c.
+
+=New Zealand.=
+
+=France.= By Miss M. ROBERTS, Author of "The Atelier du Lys," "Mdlle.
+Mori," &c.
+
+=Egypt.= By S. LANE POOLE, B.A., Author of "The Life of Edward Lane,"
+&c.
+
+=Spain.= By the Rev. WENTWORTH WEBSTER, M.A., Chaplain at St. Jean de
+Luz.
+
+=Turkey-in-Asia.= By J. C. MCCOAN, M.P.
+
+=Australia.= By J. F. VESEY FITZGERALD, late Premier of New South Wales.
+
+=Holland.= By R. L. POOLE.
+
+_Franc (Maude Jeane)._ The following form one Series, small post 8vo,
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+
+ ---- _Emily's Choice._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Hall's Vineyard._ 4_s._
+ ---- _John's Wife: a Story of Life in South Australia._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Marian; or, the Light of Some One's Home._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Silken Cords and Iron Fetters._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Vermont Vale._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Minnie's Mission._ 4_s._
+ ---- _Little Mercy._ 5_s._
+ ---- _Beatrice Melton's Discipline._ 4_s._
+
+_Froissart (The Boy's)._ Selected from the Chronicles of England,
+France, Spain, &c. By SIDNEY LANIER. The Volume is fully Illustrated,
+and uniform with "The Boy's King Arthur." Crown 8vo, cloth, 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+
+_Games of patience._ _See_ CADOGAN.
+
+_Gentle Life_ (Queen Edition). 2 vols, in 1, small 4to, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+THE GENTLE LIFE SERIES.
+
+Price 6_s._ each; or in calf extra, price 10_s._ 6_d._; Smaller
+Edition, cloth extra, 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+A Reprint (with the exception of "Familiar Words" and "Other People's
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+
+_The Gentle Life._ Essays in aid of the Formation of Character of
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+
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+house."--_Chambers' Journal._
+
+_About in the World._ Essays by Author of "The Gentle Life."
+
+"It is not easy to open it at any page without finding some handy
+idea."--_Morning Post._
+
+_Like unto Christ._ A New Translation of Thomas a Kempis' "De
+Imitatione Christi." 2nd Edition.
+
+"Could not be presented in a more exquisite form, for a more sightly
+volume was never seen."--_Illustrated London News._
+
+_Familiar Words._ An Index Verborum, or Quotation Handbook. Affording
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+embedded in the English language. 4th and enlarged Edition. 6_s._
+
+"The most extensive dictionary of quotation we have met with."--_Notes
+and Queries._
+
+_Essays by Montaigne._ Edited and Annotated by the Author of "The
+Gentle Life." With Portrait. 2nd Edition.
+
+"We should be glad if any words of ours could help to bespeak a large
+circulation for this handsome attractive book."--_Illustrated Times._
+
+_The Countess of Pembroke's Arcadia._ Written by Sir PHILIP SIDNEY.
+Edited with Notes by Author of "The Gentle Life." 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+"All the best things are retained intact in Mr. Friswell's
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+
+_The Gentle Life._ 2nd Series, 8th Edition.
+
+"There is not a single thought in the volume that does not contribute
+in some measure to the formation of a true gentleman."--_Daily News._
+
+_The Silent Hour: Essays, Original and Selected._ the Author of "The
+Gentle Life." 3rd Edition.
+
+"All who possess 'The Gentle Life' should own this volume."--_Standard._
+
+_Half-Length Portraits._ Short Studies of Notable Persons. By J. HAIN
+FRISWELL.
+
+_Essays on English Writers_, for the Self-improvement of Students in
+English Literature.
+
+"To all who have neglected to read and study their native literature
+we would certainly suggest the volume before us as a fitting
+introduction."--_Examiner._
+
+_Other People's Windows._ J. HAIN FRISWELL. 3rd Edition.
+
+"The chapters are so lively in themselves, so mingled with shrewd views
+of human nature, so full of illustrative anecdotes, that the reader
+cannot fail to be amused."--_Morning Post._
+
+_A Man's Thoughts._ J. HAIN FRISWELL.
+
+_German Primer._ Being an Introduction to First Steps in German. By M.
+T. PREU. 2_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Getting On in the World; or, Hints on Success in Life._ W. MATHEWS,
+LL.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._ 6_d._; gilt edges, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Gilpin's Forest Scenery._ Edited by F. G. HEATH. Large post 8vo, with
+numerous Illustrations. Uniform with "The Fern World," 12_s._ 6_d._ In
+6 monthly parts, 2_s._ each.
+
+_Gordon (J. E. H.)._ _See_ "Four Lectures on Electric Induction,"
+"Physical Treatise on Electricity," &c.
+
+_Gouffe. The Royal Cookery Book._ JULES GOUFFE; translated and adapted
+for English use by ALPHONSE GOUFFE, Head Pastrycook to her Majesty the
+Queen. Illustrated with large plates printed in colours. 161 Woodcuts,
+8vo, cloth extra, gilt edges, 2_l._ 2_s._
+
+---- Domestic Edition, half-bound, 10_s._ 6_d._
+
+"By far the ablest and most complete work on cookery that has ever been
+submitted to the gastronomical world."--_Pall Mall Gazette._
+
+_Great Artists._ _See_ "Biographies."
+
+_Great Historic Galleries of England (The)._ Edited by LORD RONALD
+GOWER, F.S.A., Trustee of the National Portrait Gallery. Illustrated
+by 24 large and carefully-executed _permanent_ Photographs of some of
+the most celebrated Pictures by the Great Masters. Imperial 4to, cloth
+extra, gilt edges, 36_s._
+
+_Great Musicians (The)._ A Series of Biographies of the Great
+Musicians. Edited by F. HUEFFER.
+
+ =1. Wagner.= By the EDITOR.
+ =2. Weber.= By Sir JULIUS BENEDICT.
+ =3. Mendelssohn.= By JOSEPH BENNETT.
+ =4. Schubert.= By H. F. FROST.
+ =5. Rossini=, and the Modern Italian School. By H. SUTHERLAND
+ EDWARDS.
+ =6. Marcello.= By ARRIGO BOITO.
+ =7. Purcell.= By H. W. CUMMINGS.
+
+Dr. Hiller and other distinguished writers, both English and Foreign,
+have promised contributions. Each Volume is complete in itself. Small
+post 8vo, cloth extra, 3_s._
+
+_Guizot's History of France._ Translated by ROBERT BLACK. Super-royal
+8vo, very numerous Full-page and other Illustrations. In 8 vols., cloth
+extra, gilt, each 24_s._
+
+"It supplies a want which has long been felt, and ought to be in the
+hands of all students of history."--_Times._
+
+---- ---- _Masson's School Edition._ The History of France from the
+Earliest Times to the Outbreak of the Revolution; abridged from
+the Translation by Robert Black, M.A., with Chronological Index,
+Historical and Genealogical Tables, &c. By Professor GUSTAVE MASSON,
+B.A., Assistant Master at Harrow School. With 24 full-page Portraits,
+and many other Illustrations. 1 vol., demy 8vo, 600 pp., cloth extra,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Guizot's History of England._ In 3 vols. of about 500 pp. each,
+containing 60 to 70 Full-page and other Illustrations, cloth extra,
+gilt, 24_s._ each.
+
+"For luxury of typography, plainness of print, and beauty of
+illustration, these volumes, of which but one has as yet appeared
+in English, will hold their own against any production of an age so
+luxurious as our own in everything, typography not excepted."--_Times._
+
+_Guyon (Mde.) Life._ UPHAM. 6th Edition, crown 8vo, 6_s._
+
+
+_Handbook to the Charities of London._ _See_ Low's.
+
+---- _of Embroidery_; _which see_.
+
+---- _to the Principal Schools of England._ _See_ Practical.
+
+_Half-Hours of Blind Man's Holiday; or, Summer and Winter Sketches in
+Black and White._ W. W. FENN, Author of "After Sundown," &c. 2 vols.,
+cr. 8vo, 24_s._
+
+_Hall (W. W.) How to Live Long; or, 1408 Health Maxims, Physical,
+Mental, and Moral._ W. W. HALL, A.M., M.D. Small post 8vo, cloth, 2_s._
+Second Edition.
+
+_Hans Brinker; or, the Silver Skates._ _See_ DODGE.
+
+_Harper's Monthly Magazine._ Published Monthly. 160 pages, fully
+Illustrated. 1_s._ With two Serial Novels by celebrated Authors.
+
+"'Harper's Magazine' is so thickly sown with excellent illustrations
+that to count them would be a work of time; not that it is a picture
+magazine, for the engravings illustrate the text after the manner seen
+in some of our choicest _editions de luxe_."--_St. James's Gazette._
+
+"It is so pretty, so big, and so cheap.... An extraordinary
+shillingsworth--160 large octavo pages, with over a score of articles,
+and more than three times as many illustrations."--_Edinburgh Daily
+Review._
+
+"An amazing shillingsworth ... combining choice literature of both
+nations."--_Nonconformist._
+
+_Heart of Africa._ Three Years' Travels and Adventures in the
+Unexplored Regions of Central Africa, from 1868 to 1871. By Dr. GEORG
+SCHWEINFURTH. Numerous Illustrations, and large Map. 2 vols., crown
+8vo, cloth, 15_s._
+
+_Heath (Francis George)._ _See_ "Fern World," "Fern Paradise," "Our
+Woodland Trees," "Trees and Ferns," "Gilpin's Forest Scenery," "Burnham
+Beeches," "Sylvan Spring," &c.
+
+_Heber's (Bishop) Illustrated Edition of Hymns._ With upwards of 100
+beautiful Engravings. Small 4to, handsomely bound, 7_s._ 6_d._ Morocco,
+18_s._ 6_d._ and 21_s._ An entirely New Edition.
+
+_Heir of Kilfinnan (The)._ New Story by W. H. G. KINGSTON, Author of
+"Snow Shoes and Canoes," &c. With Illustrations. Cloth, gilt edges,
+7_s._ 6_d._; plainer binding, plain edges, 5_s._
+
+_History and Handbook of Photography._ Translated from the French of
+GASTON TISSANDIER. Edited by J. THOMSON. Imperial 16mo, over 300 pages,
+70 Woodcuts, and Specimens of Prints by the best Permanent Processes.
+Second Edition, with an Appendix by the late Mr. HENRY FOX TALBOT.
+Cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+_History of a Crime (The); Deposition of an Eye-witness._ VICTOR HUGO.
+4 vols., crown 8vo, 42_s._ Cheap Edition, 1 vol., 6_s._
+
+---- _Ancient Art._ Translated from the German of JOHN WINCKELMANN, by
+JOHN LODGE, M.D. With very numerous Plates and Illustrations. 2 vols.,
+8vo, 36_s._
+
+---- _England._ _See_ GUIZOT.
+
+---- _France._ _See_ GUIZOT.
+
+---- _Russia._ _See_ RAMBAUD.
+
+---- _Merchant Shipping._ _See_ LINDSAY.
+
+---- _United States._ _See_ BRYANT.
+
+_History and Principles of Weaving by Hand and by Power._ With several
+hundred Illustrations. By ALFRED BARLOW. Royal 8vo, cloth extra, 1_l._
+5_s._ Second Edition.
+
+_How I Crossed Africa: from the Atlantic to the Indian Ocean, Through
+Unknown Countries; Discovery of the Great Zambesi Affluents, &c._--Vol.
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+half morocco, gilt edges, 12 guineas, containing 15 to 20 Portraits
+each. See below.
+
+"Messrs. SAMPSON LOW & CO. are about to issue an important
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+ =1. The Great Lone Land.= By Major W. F. BUTLER, C.B.
+ =2. The Wild North Land.= By Major W. F. BUTLER, C.B.
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+ Boothia.= By A. H. MARKHAM.
+ =6. Campaigning on the Oxus.= By J. A. MACGAHAN.
+ =7. Akim-foo: the History of a Failure.= By MAJOR W. F.
+ BUTLER, C.B.
+ =8. Ocean to Ocean.= By the Rev. GEORGE M. GRANT. With
+ Illustrations.
+ =9. Cruise of the Challenger.= By W. J. J. SPRY, R.N.
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+ Frontispiece by F. WALKER, A.R.A.
+ =Kilmeny.= A Novel. By W. BLACK.
+ =In Silk Attire.= By W. BLACK.
+ =Lady Silverdale's Sweetheart.= By W. BLACK.
+ =History of a Crime=: The Story of the Coup d'Etat. By VICTOR
+ HUGO.
+ =Alice Lorraine.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Lorna Doone.= By R. D. BLACKMORE. 8th Edition.
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+ =Clara Vaughan.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Cripps the Carrier.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
+ =Erema; or, My Father's Sin.= By R. D. BLACKMORE.
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+ =Innocent.= By Mrs. OLIPHANT. Eight Illustrations.
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+ Illustrations. _See also_ Rose Library.
+ =The Afghan Knife.= By R. A. STERNDALE, Author of "Seonee."
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+ =Ninety-Three.= By VICTOR HUGO. Numerous Illustrations.
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+
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+
+
+_MacGahan (J. A.) Campaigning on the Oxus, and the Fall of Khiva._
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+
+---- _Description of the "Rob Roy" Canoe_, with Plans, &c., 1_s._
+
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+
+_Mackenzie (D.) The Flooding of the Sahara._ DONALD MACKENZIE. 8vo,
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+REMUSAT, Senator. Translated by Mrs. CASHEL HOEY and Mr. JOHN LILLIE.
+4th Edition, cloth extra. This work was written by Madame de Remusat
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+30_s._ Cheaper Edition, 1 vol., crown 8vo, 8_s._ 6_d._
+
+_New Novels._ Crown 8vo, cloth, 10_s._ 6_d._ per vol.:--
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+
+
+_Oberammergau Passion Play._ _See_ "Art in the Mountains."
+
+_O'Brien._ _See_ "Parliamentary History" and "Irish Land Question."
+
+_Old-Fashioned Girl._ _See_ ALCOTT.
+
+_On Horseback through Asia Minor._ Capt. FRED BURNABY, Royal Horse
+Guards, Author of "A Ride to Khiva." 2 vols., 8vo, with three Maps and
+Portrait of Author, 6th Edition, 38_s._; Cheaper Edition, crown 8vo,
+10_s._ 6_d._
+
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+
+---- _Historic Devices, Badges, and War Cries._ 8vo, 1_l._ 1_s._
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+_Parliamentary History of the Irish Land Question (The)._ From 1829
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+English Public Opinion." 3rd Edition, corrected and revised, with
+additional matter. Post 8vo, cloth extra, 6_s._
+
+The Right Hon. W. E. GLADSTONE, M.P., in a Letter to the Author,
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+
+_Pathways of Palestine: a Descriptive Tour through the Holy Land._
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+Published in 22 Monthly Parts, 4to, in Wrapper, 2_s._ 6_d._ each.
+
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+
+"As the writer is on the point of making a fourth visit of exploration
+to the country, any new discoveries which come under observation will
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+
+_Peasant Life in the West of England._ FRANCIS GEORGE HEATH, Author
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+
+_Petites Lecons de Conversation et de Grammaire: Oral and
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+Master at King Edward the Sixth's School, Birmingham. Author of "The
+Student's French Examiner," "First Steps in Conversational French
+Grammar," which see.
+
+_Phillips (L.) Dictionary of Biographical Reference._ 8vo, 1_l._ 11_s._
+6_d._
+
+_Photography (History and Handbook of)._ _See_ TISSANDIER.
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+
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+
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+
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+
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+
+_Poynter (Edward J., R.A.)._ _See_ "Illustrated Text-books."
+
+_Practical (A) Handbook to the Principal Schools of England._ By C. E.
+PASCOE. New Edition, crown 8vo, cloth extra, 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+_Prejevalsky (N. M.) From Kulja, across the Tian Shan to Lobnor._
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+
+
+
+
+FOOTNOTES
+
+
+ [A] How Mr. Garrett executed his mission and killed the Kid is
+ narrated in the account of the desperados of the West, which
+ forms a separate chapter.
+
+ [B] The day of our departure from the United States, after the
+ visit of which I have been giving the details, was the date
+ of a great crime, of which we were then ignorant. About the
+ very time that we were on our way to the wharf to embark on
+ board the "_City of Berlin_," the murderer of the President
+ was accomplishing his purpose. But with all the means and
+ appliances which exist for the despatch of news, I believe
+ that the commission of the crime was not known till the
+ steamer had passed out to sea from the Sand Heads.
+
+ [C] _See also_ Rose Library.
+
+
+
+
+London:
+
+SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, SEARLE, & RIVINGTON,
+
+CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET, E.C.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Hesperothen; Notes from the West, Vol.
+II (of 2), by W. H. Russell
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HESPEROTHEN, VOLUME II ***
+
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