Minnesota And Dacotah By C.C. Andrews





















































































































 -  No settlements were to
be seen, because the regulations of military reservations preclude
their being made except for some purpose - Page 115
Minnesota And Dacotah By C.C. Andrews - Page 115 of 188 - First - Home

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No Settlements Were To Be Seen, Because The Regulations Of Military Reservations Preclude Their Being Made Except For Some Purpose Connected With The Public Interests.

A heavy shower the night before had effectually laid the dust, and we bounded along on the easy coach in high spirits.

The view of the prairie stretching "in airy undulations far away," and of the eddying current of the Mississippi, there as everywhere deep and majestic, with its banks skirted with autumn-colored foliage, was enough to commend the old fashioned system of stages to more general use. Call it poetry or what you please, yet the man who can contemplate with indifference the wonderful profusion of nature, undeveloped by art inviting, yet never touched by the plough must lack some one of the senses. Indeed, this picture, so characteristic of the new lands of the West, seems to call into existence a new sense. The view takes in a broad expanse which has never produced a stock of grain; and which has been traversed for ages past by a race whose greatest and most frequent calamity was hunger. If we turn to its past there is no object to call back our thoughts. All is oblivion. There are no ruins to awaken curious images of former life no vestige of humanity nothing but the present generation of nature. And yet there are traces of the past generations of nature to be seen. The depressions of the soil here and there to be observed, covered with a thick meadow grass, are unmistakeable indications of lakes which have now "vanished into thin air." That these gentle hollows were once filled with water is the more certain from the appearance of the shores of the present lakes, where the low water mark seems to have grown lower and lower every year.

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