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, I
should 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.
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