登陆注册
38624000000222

第222章

BACK TO BOSTON.

From Louisville we returned to Cincinnati, in ****** which journey we were taken to a place called Seymour, in Indiana, at which spot we were to "make connection" with the train running on the Mississippi and Ohio line from St. Louis to Cincinnati. We did make the connection, but were called upon to remain four hours at Seymour in consequence of some accident on the line. In the same way, when going eastward from Cincinnati to Baltimore a few days later, I was detained another four hours at a place called Crestline, in Ohio.

On both occasions I spent my time in realizing, as far as that might be possible, the sort of life which men lead who settle themselves at such localities. Both these towns--for they call themselves towns--had been created by the railways. Indeed this has been the case with almost every place at which a few hundred inhabitants have been drawn together in the Western States. With the exception of such cities as Chicago, St. Louis, and Cincinnati, settlers can hardly be said to have chosen their own localities. These have been chosen for them by the originators of the different lines of railway. And there is nothing in Europe in any way like to these Western railway settlements. In the first place, the line of the rails runs through the main street of the town, and forms not unfrequently the only road. At Seymour I could find no way of getting away from the rails unless I went into the fields. At Crestline, which is a larger place, I did find a street in which there was no railroad, but it was deserted, and manifestly out of favor with the inhabitants. As there were railway junctions at both these posts, there were, of course, cross-streets, and the houses extended themselves from the center thus made along the lines, houses being added to houses at short intervals as new-corners settled themselves down. The panting, and groaning, and whistling of engines is continual; for at such places freight trains are always kept waiting for passenger trains, and the slower freight trains for those which are called fast. This is the life of the town; and indeed as the whole place is dependent on the railway, so is the railway held in favor and beloved. The noise of the engines is not disliked, nor are its puffings and groanings held to be unmusical. With us a locomotive steam-engine is still, as it were, a beast of prey, against which one has to be on one's guard--in respect to which one specially warns the children. But there, in the Western States, it has been taken to the bosoms of them all as a domestic animal; no one fears it, and the little children run about almost among its wheels. It is petted and made much of on all sides--and, as far as I know, it seldom bites or tears. I have not heard of children being destroyed wholesale in the streets, or of drunken men becoming frequent sacrifices. But had I been consulted beforehand as to the natural effects of such an arrangement, Ishould have said that no child could have been reared in such a town, and that any continuance of population under such circumstances must have been impracticable.

Such places, however, do thrive and prosper with a prosperity especially their own, and the boys and girls increase and multiply in spite of all dangers. With us in England it is difficult to realize the importance which is attached to a railway in the States, and the results which a railway creates. We have roads everywhere, and our country had been cultivated throughout with more or less care before our system of railways had been commenced; but in America, especially in the North, the railways have been the precursors of cultivation. They have been carried hither and thither, through primeval forests and over prairies, with small hope of other traffic than that which they themselves would make by their own influences. The people settling on their edges have had the very best of all roads at their service; but they have had no other roads. The face of the country between one settlement and another is still in many cases utterly unknown; but there is the connecting road by which produce is carried away, and new-comers are brought in. The town that is distant a hundred miles by the rail is so near that its inhabitants are neighbors; but a settlement twenty miles distant across the uncleared country is unknown, unvisited, and probably unheard of by the women and children. Under such circumstances the railway is everything. It is the first necessity of life, and gives the only hope of wealth. It is the backbone of existence from whence spring, and by which are protected, all the vital organs and functions of the community. It is the right arm of civilization for the people, and the discoverer of the fertility of the land. It is all in all to those people, and to those regions.

It has supplied the wants of frontier life with all the substantial comfort of the cities, and carried education, progress, and social habits into the wilderness. To the eye of the stranger such places as Seymour and Crestline are desolate and dreary. There is nothing of beauty in them--given either by nature or by art. The railway itself is ugly, and its numerous sidings and branches form a mass of iron road which is bewildering, and, according to my ideas, in itself disagreeable. The wooden houses open down upon the line, and have no gardens to relieve them. A foreigner, when first surveying such a spot, will certainly record within himself a verdict against it; but in doing so he probably commits the error of judging it by a wrong standard. He should compare it with the new settlements which men have opened up in spots where no railway has assisted them, and not with old towns in which wealth has long been congregated. The traveler may see what is the place with the railway; then let him consider how it might have thriven without the railway.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 劫中仙

    劫中仙

    长寿有期,长生难求;不老可见,不死无望。为求长生不死,众圣贤盗天地以养己身,损众生以全己道,却如梦幻泡影,以致天地枯萎,劫难频发,长生不见。王昊本芸芸众生之凡俗子,半生蹉跎以苟活,岂料一朝顿悟离红尘,拖半百之躯欲窥长生,历重重劫捕长生不死之机。正所谓一劫一造化,一步一登天、、、
  • 方法总比困难多大全集(超值金版)

    方法总比困难多大全集(超值金版)

    有一个问题出现,就有一个相应的解决方法,方法的正确与否与人们的思维能力密切相关。灵活正确的方法可以使问题迎刃而解,错误的方法只能让问题越来越多。解决问题的方法有很多种,我们不但要随机应变,还要具体问题具体分析,用对方法做对事。没有做不到,只有想不到,思路一开阔,方法总比困难多。水中鱼编著的这本《方法总比困难多大全集》不仅包含了做事的态度、做事的方法,还有处理问题的窍门、经验。书中深入浅出地介绍了创新思维、逆向思维、侧向思维、联想思维、发散思维、简化思维、加减思维、系统思维等基本方法,让读者受益匪浅。
  • 最初的爱情,最后的仪式

    最初的爱情,最后的仪式

    短篇小说集《最初的爱情,最后的仪式》是伊恩·麦克尤恩的处女作兼成名作,“恐怖伊恩”的名号由此诞生。八个短篇故事分别经由青少年男性的视角出发,讲述了八段情节各异却又情绪共通的故事,或恐怖或暴烈,或残酷或变态,或荒唐或魔幻,同时却既温柔又感伤;就像每个人都会经历的疯魔而又伤感的青春期,是每个人都可以从中烛照出自我的“青春残酷物语”。
  • 恶魔神探之盘古传说

    恶魔神探之盘古传说

    暗黑版:侦探推理中国神话故事。有你想象不到的精彩!警察马萧,无意间撞到一件离奇的凶杀命案,遇到了神秘怪人轩辕卫国,一个自称轩辕家族的后人。上古神兽,神话传说,一件件神秘案件接踵而至,从此马萧陷入了神话传说案件谜团。侦破了一件件离奇案件。最后,他在轩辕卫国的带领下,抽丝剥茧,寻找真相,同时也发现了自己的真实身份,原来他是一个被封印的恶魔,而一切究竟是怎么回事?追寻着线索,他发现,神话不只是传说!一个关于盘古的另类传说出现了......
  • 如如不动智慧生

    如如不动智慧生

    一个吊在树梢的老倭瓜意外的被外星球的一个神秘零件植入体内,与世间的一段因缘就此开始。老倭瓜的神秘能量沟通着地上和地下的生命讯息,也连通着外星球的讯息,为了地上和地下生命共同生存的地球,为了守护地上生命和地下生命,老倭瓜最终爆裂了自己的躯壳。而它的魂灵转世,静默守候,以待山洞中小方盒重启之日,天上、地上和地下的讯息互通!
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 若花录

    若花录

    大师兄:“若花录怎么会缺了几页?”子喻幸灾乐祸地斜我一眼,:“师姐,我太对不住你了。”二师姐目光幽幽,“是你?”“不,是小泱泱!我见她去茅厕时撕下一页进去来着!”我那可怜的英名啊。“你胡说!本小姐的屁…臀部多么矜贵!不是一般的纸我才不用呢!”“你等等哦,我现在就找当时在场的童子来对证。”这也太狠了吧!我撕破脸皮:“哼,别以为你也能逃脱自己的罪行!上次是谁拿去包装后骗小妖们说这是琉璃仙女下凡用草纸来着?还有,谁把它当油纸包叫花鸡来吃?”“你,你也有份!哦对了还有拿来抹鼻涕!啧啧,真叫人恶心…”“你…”二师姐:“不用吵了,都给我受罚吧。”于是乎,两人踏上苦逼的撰修若花录历程。什么?你喜欢我?哼哼,等我心情好再…哎等等,做你女友包吃包美色包暖床?暖床不用,给我露一斤美色就成!
  • 做人赢在关系:让你笑傲人生的7大关系法则

    做人赢在关系:让你笑傲人生的7大关系法则

    无论你是谁,无论你做什么工作,无论你处在什么地位,只要你身边有人,只要你想要生存发展,你就离不开关系。良好的人际关系圈,可以帮助你轻松获得成功;没有足够的关系,你将多走很多弯路。而你翻开本书的时候,将会迅速得到启发,不再为关系问题发愁,并通过关系为自己的成功打下坚实的基础。
  • 健多识广

    健多识广

    今天,什么是健康的标准?怎样算是一个身心健康的人?如何判断和掌握自身的健康指标?怎样找到一套适合自己的健康生活规律?日常生活中,许多人并不注重健康科学的生活方式,他们沉迷于不良的习惯中,不注重健康科学的生活方式,随时随地踏进生活的雷区,轻者降低自己的生活质量,重者危及自己的健康和生命。《生活中来:健多识广》深入浅出,从基本的保健知识入手,内容包括不同人群、不同季节时令以及健康生活的方方面面,将现代人日常的保健常识与健康生活的最新资讯融汇一体,提出了让您和有人获得健康的途径。不妨将这本书放在枕边,时常翻翻,您会发现健康其实就在身边!
  • 上花轿的飞鸽

    上花轿的飞鸽

    在神灵诡异的双身树下,美女草灵和大力士石砣私定了终身。为了将来的爱巢,大力士告别草灵,孤身一人闯关东打工。草灵惊人的美貌,引起了当地有钱有势人的馋涎。他们施展了各种阴谋手段,有的明抢暗夺,有的绑架勒索,有的笑里藏刀……