And When I Came To Understand
That The Number Of Every Check Was Entered In A Book, And Re-
Entered At Every Change, I Did Whisper To My Wife That She Ought To
Do Without A Bonnet Box.
The ten, however, went on, and were
always duly protected.
I must add, however, that articles
requiring tender treatment will sometimes reappear a little the
worse from the hardships of their journey.
I have not much to say of Detroit - not much, that is, beyond what I
have to say of all the North. It is a large, well-built, half-
finished city lying on a convenient waterway, and spreading itself
out with promises of a wide and still wider prosperity. It has
about it perhaps as little of intrinsic interest as any of those
large Western towns which I visited. It is not so pleasant as
Milwaukee, nor so picturesque as St. Paul, nor so grand as Chicago,
nor so civilized as Cleveland, nor so busy as Buffalo. Indeed,
Detroit is neither pleasant nor picturesque at all. I will not say
that it is uncivilized; but it has a harsh, crude, unprepossessing
appearance. It has some 70,000 inhabitants, and good accommodation
for shipping. It was doing an enormous business before the war
began, and, when these troublous times are over, will no doubt
again go ahead. I do not, however, think it well to recommend any
Englishman to make a special visit to Detroit who may be wholly
uncommercial in his views, and travel in search of that which is
either beautiful or interesting.
From Detroit we continued our course westward across the State of
Michigan, through a country that was absolutely wild till the
railway pierced it, Very much of it is still absolutely wild. For
miles upon miles the road passes the untouched forest, showing that
even in Michigan the great work of civilization has hardly more
than been commenced. One thinks of the all but countless
population which is, before long, to be fed from these regions - of
the cities which will grow here, and of the amount of government
which in due time will be required - one can hardly fail to feel
that the division of the United States into separate nationalities
is merely a part of the ordained work of creation as arranged for
the well-being of mankind. The States already boast of thirty
millions of inhabitants - not of unnoticed and unnoticeable beings
requiring little, knowing little, and doing little, such as are the
Eastern hordes, which may be counted by tens of millions, but of
men and women who talk loudly and are ambitious, who eat beef, who
read and write, and understand the dignity of manhood. But these
thirty millions are as nothing to the crowds which will grow sleek,
and talk loudly, and become aggressive on these wheat and meat
producing levels. The country is as yet but touched by the
pioneering hand of population. In the old countries, agriculture,
following on the heels of pastoral, patriarchal life, preceded the
birth of cities.
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