Letters from an American Farmer eBook

Jean de Crèvecoeur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about Letters from an American Farmer.

Letters from an American Farmer eBook

Jean de Crèvecoeur
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 265 pages of information about Letters from an American Farmer.
manure, fourteen bushels of Indian corn being looked upon as a good crop.  But it is time to return from a digression, which I hope you will pardon.  Nantucket is a great nursery of seamen, pilots, coasters, and bank-fishermen; as a country belonging to the province of Massachusetts, it has yearly the benefit of a court of Common Pleas, and their appeal lies to the supreme court at Boston.  I observed before, that the Friends compose two-thirds of the magistracy of this island; thus they are the proprietors of its territory, and the principal rulers of its inhabitants; but with all this apparatus of law, its coercive powers are seldom wanted or required.  Seldom is it that any individual is amerced or punished; their jail conveys no terror; no man has lost his life here judicially since the foundation of this town, which is upwards of an hundred years.  Solemn tribunals, public executions, humiliating punishments, are altogether unknown.  I saw neither governors, nor any pageantry of state; neither ostentatious magistrates, nor any individuals clothed with useless dignity:  no artificial phantoms subsist here either civil or religious; no gibbets loaded with guilty citizens offer themselves to your view; no soldiers are appointed to bayonet their compatriots into servile compliance.  But how is a society composed of 5000 individuals preserved in the bonds of peace and tranquillity?  How are the weak protected from the strong?—­I will tell you.  Idleness and poverty, the causes of so many crimes, are unknown here; each seeks in the prosecution of his lawful business that honest gain which supports them; every period of their time is full, either on shore or at sea.  A probable expectation of reasonable profits, or of kindly assistance, if they fail of success, renders them strangers to licentious expedients.  The simplicity of their manners shortens the catalogues of their wants; the law at a distance is ever ready to exert itself in the protection of those who stand in need of its assistance.  The greatest part of them are always at sea, pursuing the whale or raising the cod from the surface of the banks:  some cultivate their little farms with the utmost diligence; some are employed in exercising various trades; others again in providing every necessary resource in order to refit their vessels, or repair what misfortunes may happen, looking out for future markets, etc.  Such is the rotation of those different scenes of business which fill the measure of their days; of that part of their lives at least which is enlivened by health, spirits, and vigour.  It is but seldom that vice grows on a barren sand like this, which produces nothing without extreme labour.  How could the common follies of society take root in so despicable a soil; they generally thrive on its exuberant juices:  here there are none but those which administer to the useful, to the necessary, and to the indispensable comforts of life.  This land must necessarily either produce
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Letters from an American Farmer from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.