This was in western Canada. Toronto was separated from Yorkville, but was a busy, substantial city. I remember the stores being closed when Lincoln was buried, and black bunting hung along the principal streets. I remember, too, the men who were loudest in their curses[14] at the government and against Lincoln, how the tears came to their eyes, and how that event brought them to their senses. Most of them were shoemakers from New England.
In 1873 I crossed into Michigan with my family. Even as late as that the greater part of northern Michigan, and especially the upper peninsula, was terra incognita to most of the people of that State. The railroads stopped at a long distance this side the Straits of Mackinaw. The lumbermen had but skimmed the best of the trees; and, with the exception of a few isolated11 settlements on the lakes and up the larger rivers, it was an unbroken wilderness12, abounding13 in fish, deer, bears, wolves, and wild-cats; in fact, a hunter's paradise, as it is even to this day.
But with the extension of the railways to the Straits of Mackinaw, and the opening of new lines to the north into the iron mines of Menominee to the Gogebic range, the great copper14 mines of the Keweenaw[15] peninsula, and the ever-increasing traffic of the lakes, the changes were simply marvellous. Some things I shall say will seem paradoxical, but they are nevertheless true to life.
The greater parts of southern Michigan and southern Wisconsin were settled by people from New York State; and long before the northern parts of Michigan and Wisconsin were opened up, new States had risen in the West, and the tide of immigration swept past towards new frontiers, leaving vast frontiers behind them. Sometimes a few stray men with money at their command would pierce the country and form a settlement, as in the case of Traverse City. Here for years the mail was brought by the Indians on dog-sledges in the winter. It took eight days to reach Grand Rapids on snow-shoes. It is four hundred miles by water to Chicago. Sometimes the winters were so long that the provisions had to be dealt out very sparingly; but all the time the little colony was growing, and when at last the railroads reached it,[16] the traveller, after riding for miles through virgin15 forests, would come upon a little city of four thousand people, with good churches, fine schools, and one store that cost one hundred thousand dollars to build.
If it chanced to be summer-time he would see the tepees of the Indians along the bay, and two blocks back civilized16 homes with all the conveniences and luxuries of modern life. Here a huge canoe made of a single log, and there a mammoth17 steamer with all the elegances18 of an ocean-liner. Should he go on board of one of the steamers coasting around the lakes with supplies, he would pass great bays with lovely islands, and steam within a stone's throw of a comparatively rare bird, the great northern diver, and suddenly find himself near a wharf19 with a village in sight—a great saw-mill cutting its hundreds of thousands of feet of lumber10 a day; and near by, Indian graves with the food still fresh inside, and a tame deer with a collar and bell around its neck trotting20 around the streets.
He can sit and fish for trout21 on his doorstep that borders the little stream, or he can get on the company's locomotive and run twenty miles back into the woods and see the coveys of partridges rising in clouds, and here and there a timid doe and her fawn22, whose curiosity is greater than their fears, until the whistle blows, and they are off like a shot into the deep forest, near where the black bear is munching23 raspberries in a ten-thousand-acre patch, while millions of bushels of whortleberries will waste for lack of pickers. He can sit on a point of an inland lake and catch minnows on one side, and pull up black bass24 on the other; and if a "tenderfoot" he will bring home as much as he can carry, expecting to be praised for his skill. He is mortified25 at the request to please bury them. He will ride over ground that less than fifteen years ago could be bought for a song and to-day produces millions, and is dotted with towns and huge furnaces glowing night and day.
[18]If in the older settled parts, he will ride through cornfields whose tassels26 are up to the car windows, where the original settler paddled his skiff and caught pickerel and the ague at the same time, and who is still alive to tell the story. He can talk with a man who knew every white man by name when he first went there, and remembers the Indian peeping in through his log-cabin window, but whose grandchildren have graduated from a university with twenty-seven hundred students, where he helped build the log schoolhouse; who remembers when he had to send miles for salt, and yet was living over a bed of it big enough to salt the world down.
He had nothing but York State pumpkins27 and wild cranberries28 for his Thanksgiving dinner, with salt pork for turkey; and he lives to-day in one of the great fruit belts of the world, and ships his turkeys by the ton to the East; and to-day in the North the same experience is going on. Places where the mention of[19] an apple makes the teeth water, and where you can still see them come wrapped in tissue paper like oranges, and yet, paradoxical as it may seem, you can enter a lumber-camp and find the men regaled on roast chicken and eating cucumbers before the seed is sown in that part of the country.
Here are farms worth over eighty thousand dollars, which but a few years ago were entered by the homesteader who had to live on potatoes and salt, and cut wild hay in summer, and draw it to town on a cedar29 jumper, in order to get flour for his hungry children. Here on an island are men living who used to leave their farming to see the one steamer unload and load, or watch a schooner30 drawn31 up over the Rapids, and who now see sweeping32 by their farms a procession of craft whose tonnage is greater than all the ocean ports of the country.
I have sat on the deck of a little steamer and drawn pictures for the Indians, who took them and marched off[20] with the smile of a schoolboy getting a prize chromo, and in less than five years from that time I have at the same place sat down in a hotel lighted with electricity, and a menu equal to any in the country, with a bronze portrait of General Grant embossed on the top. Within ten years I have preached, with an Indian chief for an interpreter, in a log house in which a half-brother of Riel of North-Western fame was a hearer, where to-day there are self-supporting churches and flourishing schools.
Less than sixteen years ago I stopped at the end of the Michigan Central Railway, northern division; every lot was filled with stumps33. A school was being rapidly built, while the church had a lot only. The next time I visited the town it had fine churches and schools. The hotel had a beautiful conservatory34 filled with choice flowers. I could take my train, pass on over the Straits of Mackinaw, on by rail again, and clear to the Pacific, with sleeper35 and dining-car attached.
But once leave your railway, and soon you can get to settlements twenty years old which saw the first buggy last year come into the clearings. Here are deep forests where the preacher on his way home from church meets the panther and the wild-cat, and where as yet he must ford36 the rivers and build his church, the first in nine thousand square miles.
点击收听单词发音
1 bucks | |
n.雄鹿( buck的名词复数 );钱;(英国十九世纪初的)花花公子;(用于某些表达方式)责任v.(马等)猛然弓背跃起( buck的第三人称单数 );抵制;猛然震荡;马等尥起后蹄跳跃 | |
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2 slung | |
抛( sling的过去式和过去分词 ); 吊挂; 遣送; 押往 | |
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3 buffalo | |
n.(北美)野牛;(亚洲)水牛 | |
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4 dens | |
n.牙齿,齿状部分;兽窝( den的名词复数 );窝点;休息室;书斋 | |
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5 appropriation | |
n.拨款,批准支出 | |
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6 prevailing | |
adj.盛行的;占优势的;主要的 | |
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7 wagon | |
n.四轮马车,手推车,面包车;无盖运货列车 | |
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8 prying | |
adj.爱打听的v.打听,刺探(他人的私事)( pry的现在分词 );撬开 | |
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9 pretentious | |
adj.自命不凡的,自负的,炫耀的 | |
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10 lumber | |
n.木材,木料;v.以破旧东西堆满;伐木;笨重移动 | |
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11 isolated | |
adj.与世隔绝的 | |
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12 wilderness | |
n.杳无人烟的一片陆地、水等,荒漠 | |
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13 abounding | |
adj.丰富的,大量的v.大量存在,充满,富于( abound的现在分词 ) | |
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14 copper | |
n.铜;铜币;铜器;adj.铜(制)的;(紫)铜色的 | |
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15 virgin | |
n.处女,未婚女子;adj.未经使用的;未经开发的 | |
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16 civilized | |
a.有教养的,文雅的 | |
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17 mammoth | |
n.长毛象;adj.长毛象似的,巨大的 | |
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18 elegances | |
n.高雅( elegance的名词复数 );(举止、服饰、风格等的)优雅;精致物品;(思考等的)简洁 | |
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19 wharf | |
n.码头,停泊处 | |
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20 trotting | |
小跑,急走( trot的现在分词 ); 匆匆忙忙地走 | |
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21 trout | |
n.鳟鱼;鲑鱼(属) | |
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22 fawn | |
n.未满周岁的小鹿;v.巴结,奉承 | |
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23 munching | |
v.用力咀嚼(某物),大嚼( munch的现在分词 ) | |
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24 bass | |
n.男低音(歌手);低音乐器;低音大提琴 | |
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25 mortified | |
v.使受辱( mortify的过去式和过去分词 );伤害(人的感情);克制;抑制(肉体、情感等) | |
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26 tassels | |
n.穗( tassel的名词复数 );流苏状物;(植物的)穗;玉蜀黍的穗状雄花v.抽穗, (玉米)长穗须( tassel的第三人称单数 );使抽穗, (为了使作物茁壮生长)摘去穗状雄花;用流苏装饰 | |
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27 pumpkins | |
n.南瓜( pumpkin的名词复数 );南瓜的果肉,南瓜囊 | |
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28 cranberries | |
n.越橘( cranberry的名词复数 ) | |
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29 cedar | |
n.雪松,香柏(木) | |
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30 schooner | |
n.纵帆船 | |
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31 drawn | |
v.拖,拉,拔出;adj.憔悴的,紧张的 | |
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32 sweeping | |
adj.范围广大的,一扫无遗的 | |
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33 stumps | |
(被砍下的树的)树桩( stump的名词复数 ); 残肢; (板球三柱门的)柱; 残余部分 | |
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34 conservatory | |
n.温室,音乐学院;adj.保存性的,有保存力的 | |
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35 sleeper | |
n.睡眠者,卧车,卧铺 | |
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36 Ford | |
n.浅滩,水浅可涉处;v.涉水,涉过 | |
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