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north america-1-第46章

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hy heaven; with its thunder; did not open over the heads of Rebecca and her son。  But Jacob; with all his fraud; was the chosen one。  Perhaps the day may come when scrupulous honesty may be the best policy; even on the frontier。  I can only say that hitherto that day seems to be as distant as ever。  I do not pretend to solve the problem; but simply record my opinion that under circumstances as they still exist I should not willingly select a frontier life for my children。 I have said that all great frontier men have been unscrupulous。 There is; however; an exception in history which may perhaps serve to prove the rule。  The Puritans who colonized New England were frontier men; and were; I think; in general scrupulously honest。 They had their faults。  They were stern; austere men; tyrannical at the backbone when power came in their way; as are all pioneers; hard upon vices for which they who made the laws had themselves no minds; but they were not dishonest。 At Milwaukee I went up to see the Wisconsin volunteers; who were then encamped on open ground in the close vicinity of the town。  Of Wisconsin I had heard beforeand have heard the same opinion repeated sincethat it was more backward in its volunteering than its neighbor States in the West。  Wisconsin has 760;000 inhabitants; and its tenth thousand of volunteers was not then made up; whereas Indiana; with less than double its number; had already sent out thirty…six thousand。  Iowa; with a hundred thousand less of inhabitants; had then made up fifteen thousand。  But neverthless to me it seemed that Wisconsin was quite alive to its presumed duty in that respect。  Wisconsin; with its three…quarters of a million of people; is as large as England。  Every acre of it may be made productive; but as yet it is not half cleared。  Of such a country its young men are its heart's blood。  Ten thousand men; fit to bear arms; carried away from such a land to the horrors of civil war; is a sight as full of sadness as any on which the eye can rest。  Ah me; when will they return; and with what altered hopes!  It is; I fear; easier to turn the sickle into the sword than to recast the sword back again into the sickle! We found a completed regiment at Wisconsin consisting entirely of Germans。  A thousand Germans had been collected in that State and brought together in one regiment; and I was informed by an officer on the ground that there are many Germans in sundry other of the Wisconsin regiments。  It may be well to mention here that the number of Germans through all these Western States is very great。 Their number and well…being were to me astonishing。  That they form a great portion of the population of New York; making the German quarter of that city the third largest German town in the world; I have long known; but I had no previous idea of their expansion westward。  In Detroit nearly every third shop bore a German name; and the same remark was to be made at Milwaukee; and on all hands I heard praises of their morals; of their thrift; and of their new patriotism。  I was continually told how far they exceeded the Irish settlers。  To me in all parts of the world an Irishman is dear。 When handled tenderly he becomes a creature most lovable。  But with all my judgment in the Irishman's favor; and with my prejudices leaning the same way; I feel myself bound to state what I heard and what I saw as to the Germans。 But this regiment of Germans; and another not completed regiment; called from the State generally; were as yet without arms; accouterments; or clothing。  There was the raw material of the regiment; but there was nothing else。  Winter was coming onwinter in which the mercury is commonly twenty degrees below zeroand the men were in tents with no provision against the cold。  These tents held each two men; and were just large enough for two to lie。  The canvas of which they were made seemed to me to be thin; but was; I think; always double。  At this camp there was a house in which the men took their meals; but I visited other camps in which there was no such accommodation。  I saw the German regiment called to its supper by tuck of drum; and the men marched in gallantly; armed each with a knife and spoon。  I managed to make my way in at the door after them; and can testify to the excellence of the provisions of which their supper consisted。  A poor diet never enters into any combination of circumstances contemplated by an American。  Let him be where he will; animal food is with him the first necessary of life; and he is always provided accordingly。  As to those Wisconsin men whom I saw; it was probable that they might be marched off; down South to Washington; or to the doubtful glories of the Western campaign under Fremont; before the winter commenced。  The same might have been said of any special regiment。 But taking the whole mass of men who were collected under canvas at the end of the autumn of 1861; and who were so collected without arms or military clothing; and without protection from the weather; it did seem that the task taken in hand by the Commissariat of the Northern army was one not devoid of difficulty。 The view from Milwaukee over Lake Michigan is very pleasing。  One looks upon a vast expanse of water to which the eye finds no bounds; and therefore there are none of the common attributes of lake beauty; but the color of the lake is bright; and within a walk of the city the traveler comes to the bluffs or low round…topped hills; from which we can look down upon the shores。  These bluffs form the beauty of Wisconsin and Minnesota; and relieve the eye after the flat level of Michigan。  Round Detroit there is no rising ground; and therefore; perhaps; it is that Detroit is uninteresting。 I have said that those who are called on to labor in these States have their own hardships; and I have endeavored to explain what are the sufferings to which the town laborer is subject。  To escape from this is the laborer's great ambition; and his mode of doing so consists almost universally in the purchase of land。  He saves up money in order that he may buy a section of an allotment; and thus become his own master。  All his savings are made with a view to this independence。  Seated on his own land he will have to work probably harder than ever; but he will work for himself。  No task… master can then stand over him and wound his pride with harsh words。  He will be his own master; will eat the food which he himself has grown; and live in the cabin which his own hands have built。  This is the object of his life; and to secure this position he is content to work late and early and to undergo the indignities of previous servitude。  The government price for land is about five shillings an acreone dollar and a quarterand the settler may get it for this price if he be contented to take it not only untouched as regards clearing; but also far removed from any completed road。  The traffic in these lands has been the great speculating business of Western men。  Five or six years ago; when the rage for such purchases was at its height; land was becoming a scarce article in the market。  Individuals or companies bought it up with the object of reselling it at a profit; and many; no doubt; did make money。  Railway compa
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