The Great Lone Land eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 440 pages of information about The Great Lone Land.

The Great Lone Land eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 440 pages of information about The Great Lone Land.
glorious with mountain, lake, river, and forest, all unseen, all unknown to the wanderer who for the first time seeks the American shore; yet instinctively their presence is felt in that faint outline of sea-lapped coast which lifts itself above the ocean; and even if in after-time it becomes the lot of the wanderer, as it became my lot, to look again upon these mountain summits, these immense inland seas; these mighty rivers whose waters seek their mother ocean through 3000 miles of meadow, in none of these glorious parts, vast though they be, will the sense of the still vaster whole be realized as strongly as in that first glimpse of land showing dimly over the western horizon of the Atlantic.

The sunset of a very beautiful evening in May was making bright the shores of Massachusetts as the “Samaria,” under her fullest head of steam, ran up the entrance to Plymouth Sound.  To save daylight into port was an object of moment to the Captain, for the approach to Boston harbour is as intricate as shoal, sunken rock, and fort-crowned island can make it.  If ever that much talked-of conflict between the two great branches of the Anglo-Saxon race is destined to quit the realms of fancy for those of fact, Boston, at least, will rest as safe from the destructive engines of British iron-clads as the city of Omaha on the Missouri River.  It was only natural that the Massachusetts man should have been in a fever of excitement at finding himself once more within sight of home; and for once human nature exhibited the unusual spectacle of rejoicing over the falsity of its own predictions.  As every revolution of the screw brought out some new feature into prominence, he skipped gleefully about; and, recognizing in my person the stranger element in the assembly, he took particular pains to point out the lions of the landscape.  “There, serais Fort Warren, where we kept our rebel prisoners during the war.  In a few minutes more, sir, we will be in sight of Bunker’s Hill;” and then, in a frenzy of excitement, he skipped away to some post of vantage upon the forecastle.

Night had come down over the harbour, and Boston had lighted all her lamps, before the “Samaria,” swinging round in the fast-running tide, lay, with quiet screw and smokeless funnel, alongside the wharf of New England’s oldest city.

“Real mean of that darned Baptist pointing you out Bunker’s Hill,” said the sea-captain from Maine; “just like the ill-mannered republican cuss!” It was useless to tell him that I had felt really obliged for the information given me by his political opponent.  “Never mind,” he said, “to-morrow I’ll show you how these moral Bostonians break their darned liquor law in every hotel in their city.”

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The Great Lone Land from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.