登陆注册
38624000000192

第192章

The great glory of the town is the "levee," as it is called, or the long river beach up to which the steamers are brought with their bows to the shore. It is an esplanade looking on to the river, not built with quays or wharves, as would be the case with us, but with a sloping bank running down to the water. In the good days of peace a hundred vessels were to be seen here, each with its double funnels. The line of them seemed to be never ending even when I was there, but then a very large proportion of them were lying idle.

They resemble huge, wooden houses, apparently of frail architecture, floating upon the water. Each has its double row of balconies running round it, and the lower or ground floor is open throughout.

The upper stories are propped and supported on ugly sticks and rickety-looking beams; so that the first appearance does not convey any great idea of security to a stranger. They are always painted white, and the paint is always very dirty. When they begin to move, they moan and groan in melancholy tones which are subversive of all comfort; and as they continue on their courses they puff and bluster, and are forever threatening to burst and shatter themselves to pieces. There they lie, in a continuous line nearly a mile in length, along the levee of St. Louis, dirty, dingy, and now, alas!

mute. They have ceased to groan and puff, and, if this war be continued for six months longer, will become rotten and useless as they lie.

They boast at St. Louis that they command 46,000 miles of navigable river water, counting the great rivers up and down from that place.

These rivers are chiefly the Mississippi; the Missouri and Ohio, which fall into the Mississippi near St. Louis; the Platte and Kansas Rivers, tributaries of the Missouri; the Illinois, and the Wisconsin. All these are open to steamers, and all of them traverse regions rich in corn, in coal, in metals, or in timber. These ready-made highways of the world center, as it were, at St. Louis, and make it the depot of the carrying trade of all that vast country. Minnesota is 1500 miles above New Orleans, but the wheat of Minnesota can be brought down the whole distance without change of the vessel in which it is first deposited. It would seem to be impossible that a country so blessed should not become rich. It must be remembered that these rivers flow through lands that have never yet been surpassed in natural fertility. Of all countries in the world one would say that the States of America should have been the last to curse themselves with a war; but now the curse has fallen upon them with a double vengeance, it would seem that they could never be great in war: their very institutions forbid it;their enormous distances forbid it; the price of labor forbids it;and it is forbidden also by the career of industry and expansion which has been given to them. But the curse of fighting has come upon them, and they are showing themselves to be as eager in the works of war as they have shown themselves capable in the works of peace. Men and angels must weep as they behold the things that are being done, as they watch the ruin that has come and is still coming, as they look on commerce killed and agriculture suspended.

No sight so sad has come upon the earth in our days. They were a great people; feeding the world, adding daily to the mechanical appliances of mankind, increasing in population beyond all measures of such increase hitherto known, and extending education as fast as they extended their numbers. Poverty had as yet found no place among them, and hunger was an evil of which they had read but were themselves ignorant. Each man among their crowds had a right to be proud of his manhood. To read and write--I am speaking here of the North--was as common as to eat and drink. To work was no disgrace, and the wages of work were plentiful. To live without work was the lot of none. What blessing above these blessings was needed to make a people great and happy? And now a stranger visiting them would declare that they are wallowing in a very slough of despond. The only trade open is the trade of war. The axe of the woodsman is at rest; the plow is idle; the artificer has closed his shop. The roar of the foundery is still heard because cannon are needed, and the river of molten iron comes out as an implement of death. The stone-cutter's hammer and the mason's trowel are never heard. The gold of the country is hiding itself as though it had returned to its mother earth, and the infancy of a paper currency has been commenced. Sick soldiers, who have never seen a battle-field, are dying by hundreds in the squalid dirt of their unaccustomed camps. Men and women talk of war, and of war only. Newspapers full of the war are alone read.

A contract for war stores--too often a dishonest contract--is the one path open for commercial enterprise. The young man must go to the war or he is disgraced. The war swallows everything, and as yet has failed to produce even such bitter fruits as victory or glory.

Must it not be said that a curse has fallen upon the land?

And yet I still hope that it may ultimately be for good. Through water and fire must a nation be cleansed of its faults. It has been so with all nations, though the phases of their trials have been different. It did not seem to be well with us in Cromwell's early days; nor was it well with us afterward in those disgraceful years of the later Stuarts. We know how France was bathed in blood in her effort to rid herself of her painted sepulcher of an ancient throne;how Germany was made desolate, in order that Prussia might become a nation. Ireland was poor and wretched till her famine came. Men said it was a curse, but that curse has been her greatest blessing.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 凡人意识

    凡人意识

    什么是意识?是所有生物都拥有意识,还是人类独有?察觉杀气果断反杀,遭遇GANK提前离开,意识存在万物之间。在不断萎缩的世界反面,少年背负起旧神的灵龛,从灰暗的历史中走了出来,决定带给凡人们新生。
  • 魔法师神探

    魔法师神探

    穿越到哈利波特的世界?可惜早了十一年。那在故事开始之前,就先看看我们的主人公,作为一名魔法世界的探员,与恶势力作斗争的日常吧。
  • TFboys之那年的约定

    TFboys之那年的约定

    他们是万人瞩目的明星,她们是首富的千金。他们因为一次偶遇,彼此爱上了对方。。。
  • 我的相公不打鸣

    我的相公不打鸣

    ‘你到底是谁?’‘我是你相公’“我没有相公,我当年是跟公鸡拜堂的”“可是我吃了跟你拜堂的公鸡,我就是你相公了!”“那你打个鸣我听听!”“……”一身凤冠霞披,夜思红痴了,作为一个女人,人生当中最幸福的时刻,就是头顶凤冠,九龙转凤大红盖头,一身绣花红袍,肩披霞帔,挽着自己心爱的男人,走进婚姻殿堂。可如今,夜思红可一点都不幸福,透过大红盖头,瞅了一眼跟自己拜堂的对象……emmmm……贴切的说,那是个鸡,对,没看错,就是鸡,还是不下蛋得那种,公鸡。翘他么的,花轿还没进门,没见面的相公就挂了,怪我喽?按理来说,这种事!是女方命太硬,克夫!我克你大爷、你才克夫,你们十八辈祖宗都克夫,夜思红咬牙切齿,双目喷火。新婚之夜,本来的洞房花烛成了独自守寡,夜思红托着下巴,百无聊赖,突然发现对面阁楼上窗口飞出一只鹞鹰,什么鬼?一头雾水。第二天,同样的时间,还是那个窗口,飞出了一只翎雀,算了,不管了,不就一只鸟么?第三天,夜思红偷偷摸摸爬上了阁楼,透过锈迹斑驳的门缝,夜思红瞪大了眼睛,里边……竟然……
  • 少年鬼中仙

    少年鬼中仙

    一个从小就容易被鬼上身的男人,经历了不同的离奇事件。离奇的身世,诡异的组织,让这个男人渐渐的走上不一样的道路。
  • 源来凯玺欢我

    源来凯玺欢我

    "想死吗?那就离我远点!”黑道?杀手?社会?集团?大哥大们,通通让到。看小女子如何守住爱情。开朗女生却有不为人之的难过,无人地,她就像死了一般的宁静。
  • 迟妤真的思故渊

    迟妤真的思故渊

    “萧故渊,遇到你是我人生中最幸运的一件事”“萧太太,余生有你才安好”,迟妤依偎在萧故渊的肩上一脸笑容“萧先生你长的真好看”“在怎么夸儿子会不开心的”迟妤摸着隆起的小腹,开心的笑着说,“有可能是女儿呀”萧故渊摸了摸怀中人的头,“是你生的我都喜欢,我都要”……“萧故渊,不要过来”“不!不要!”……“萧故渊……你醒醒……我不能没有你……孩子也不能没有父亲……你醒醒……”萧故渊我们刚开始是不是就错了“放火之灾”“失母之痛”“眸沐之死”……迟妤和萧故渊该如何携手面对这一切……“迟妤,我要和你执子之手与子偕老”“萧先生”“萧太太”
  • 你曾是我年少的喜欢

    你曾是我年少的喜欢

    都说,陪伴是最长情的告白。那他默默陪伴的四年换来的会是什么
  • 青年成长手册

    青年成长手册

    本书是对二十个有关生命、生存、生活等方面内容写下的思想领会、智慧理解、生活总结和人生感悟。
  • 玉世缘

    玉世缘

    一件宝物,牵动所有人的欲望和贪婪。周朝末年,诸侯争霸!曾经的盟友变成敌人,曾经的敌人却日益壮大。利益?诸侯不会妥协的基本。协议?不过是满足利益的手法。武功?大神或弱鸡往往决定不了自己的命运。