North America - Volume 1 By Anthony Trollope 




















































































































































 -   When there she
rode with comparative ease upon the waters, and took the sharp turn
round into the river below - Page 178
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When There She Rode With Comparative Ease Upon The Waters, And Took The Sharp Turn Round Into The River Below Without A Struggle.

The feat was done, and the Maid was rescued from the sheriff.

It is said that she was sold below at the mouth of the river, and carried from thence over Lake Ontario, and down the St. Lawrence to Quebec.

CHAPTER VIII.

NORTH AND WEST.

From Niagara we determined to proceed Northwest - as far to the Northwest as we could go with any reasonable hope of finding American citizens in a state of political civilization, and perhaps guided also in some measure by our hopes as to hotel accommodation. Looking to these two matters, we resolved to get across to the Mississippi, and to go up that river as far as the town of St. Paul and the Falls of St. Anthony, which are some twelve miles above the town; then to descend the river as far as the States of Iowa on the west and Illinois on the east; and to return eastward through Chicago and the large cities on the southern shores of Lake Erie, from whence we would go across to Albany, the capital of New York state, and down the Hudson to New York, the capital of the Western World. For such a journey, in which scenery was one great object, we were rather late, as we did not leave Niagara till the 10th of October; but though the winters are extremely cold through all this portion of the American continent - fifteen, twenty, and even twenty-five degrees below zero being an ordinary state of the atmosphere in latitudes equal to those of Florence, Nice, and Turin - nevertheless the autumns are mild, the noonday being always warm, and the colors of the foliage are then in all their glory.

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