登陆注册
5593900000144

第144章

I went through New York to Philadelphia, and made a short visit to the latter town. Philadelphia seems to me to have thrown off its Quaker garb, and to present itself to the world in the garments ordinarily assumed by large cities--by which I intend to express my opinion that the Philadelphians are not, in these latter days, any better than their neighbors. I am not sure whether in some respects they may not perhaps be worse. Quakers--Quakers absolutely in the very flesh of close bonnets and brown knee-breeches--are still to be seen there; but they are not numerous, and would not strike the eye if one did not specially look for a Quaker at Philadelphia. It is a large town, with a very large hotel--there are no doubt half a dozen large hotels, but one of them is specially great--with long, straight streets, good shops and markets, and decent, comfortable-looking houses. The houses of Philadelphia generally are not so large as those of other great cities in the States. They are more modest than those of New York, and less commodious than those of Boston. Their most striking appendage is the marble steps at the front doors. Two doors, as a rule, enjoy one set of steps, on the outer edges of which there is generally no parapet or raised curb-stone. This, to my eye, gave the houses an unfinished appearance--as though the marble ran short, and no further expenditure could be made. The frost came when I was there, and then all these steps were covered up in wooden cases.

The City of Philadelphia lies between the two rivers, the Delaware and the Schuylkill. Eight chief streets run from river to river, and twenty-four principal cross-streets bisect the eight at right angles. The cross-streets are all called by their numbers. In the long streets the numbers of the houses are not consecutive, but follow the numbers of the cross-streets; so that a person living on Chestnut Street between Tenth Street and Eleventh Street, and ten doors from Tenth Street, would live at No. 1010. The opposite house would be No. 1011. It thus follows that the number of the house indicates the exact block of houses in which it is situated.

I do not like the right-angled building of these towns, nor do Ilike the sound of Twentieth Street and Thirtieth Street; but I must acknowledge that the arrangement in Philadelphia has its convenience. In New York I found it by no means an easy thing to arrive at the desired locality.

They boast in Philadelphia that they have half a million inhabitants. If this be taken as a true calculation, Philadelphia is in size the fourth city in the world--putting out of the question the cities of China, as to which we have heard so much and believe so little. But in making this calculation the citizens include the population of a district on some sides ten miles distant from Philadelphia. It takes in other towns, connected with it by railway but separated by large spaces of open country.

American cities are very proud of their population; but if they all counted in this way, there would soon be no rural population left at all. There is a very fine bank at Philadelphia, and Philadelphia is a town somewhat celebrated in its banking history.

My remarks here, however, apply simply to the external building, and not to its internal honesty and wisdom, or to its commercial credit.

In Philadelphia also stands the old house of Congress--the house in which the Congress of the United States was held previous to 1800, when the government and the Congress with it were moved to the new City of Washington. I believe, however, that the first Congress, properly so called, was assembled at New York in 1789, the date of the inauguration of the first President. It was, however, here in this building at Philadelphia that the independence of the Union was declared in 1776, and that the Constitution of the United States was framed.

Pennsylvania, with Philadelphia for its capital, was once the leading State of the Union, leading by a long distance. At the end of the last century it beat all the other States in population, but has since been surpassed by New York in all respects--in population, commerce, wealth, and general activity. Of course it is known that Pennsylvania was granted to William Penn, the Quaker, by Charles II. I cannot completely understand what was the meaning of such grants--how far they implied absolute possession in the territory, or how far they confirmed simply the power of settling and governing a colony. In this case a very considerable property was confirmed; as the claim made by Penn's children, after Penn's death, was bought up by the commonwealth of Pennsylvania for 130,000l., which, in those days, was a large price for almost any landed estate on the other side of the Atlantic.

Pennsylvania lies directly on the borders of slave land, being immediately north of Maryland. Mason and Dixon's line, of which we hear so often, and which was first established as the division between slave soil and free soil, runs between Pennsylvania and Maryland. The little State of Delaware, which lies between Maryland and the Atlantic, is also tainted with slavery, but the stain is not heavy nor indelible. In a population of a hundred and twelve thousand, there are not two thousand slaves, and of these the owners generally would willingly rid themselves if they could.

It is, however, a point of honor with these owners, as it is also in Maryland, not to sell their slaves; and a man who cannot sell his slaves must keep them. Were he to enfranchise them and send them about their business, they would come back upon his hands.

Were he to enfranchise them and pay them wages for work, they would get the wages, but he would not get the work. They would get the wages; but at the end of three months they would still fall back upon his hands in debt and distress, looking to him for aid and comfort as a child looks for it. It is not easy to get rid of a slave in a slave State. That question of enfranchising slaves is not one to be very readily solved.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 单恋是最痛苦的东西

    单恋是最痛苦的东西

    年少轻狂的祁严卿因为暗恋哥哥祁严墨的未婚妻顾倾城而毁掉了顾家,一场本应盛大的门当户对的婚礼灰飞烟灭,顾家人去楼空……多年后祁严墨的婚礼上,新娘仍然是顾倾城,她不再是锦衣玉食的顾家大小姐,面对这样一无所有的顾倾城,不再年少轻狂但依然只手遮天翻手云雨的祁严卿却不知道该怎么办了……
  • 王者荣耀重回巅峰

    王者荣耀重回巅峰

    他是百星荣耀王者,一次机会让他重拾王者,就注定了不平凡。
  • 执剑定天下

    执剑定天下

    整个天下都要我死,那我就偏偏好好活给你们看!我命由我不由天!人要我死,那我就打败人。天要我死,那我就换天!
  • 我救了皇帝的命

    我救了皇帝的命

    一朝穿越回古代,偶然救活了一个男子,男子一身抱大腿,缠上了她,竟然发现救活的这个人是当今的皇帝,皇帝什么后宫三千人,怎么会轮到自己身上,开启了一段爆笑的故事
  • 穿越后我成了少主夫人

    穿越后我成了少主夫人

    梓梓穿越爱上她仇家儿子。白月身重奇毒却还要用命换她平安。一个有短暂生命的白少主,不定时的对抗身体里的两股毒素,却还要对她呵护备至。“梓梓,你不要在这样伤害自己?”白月手握紧梓梓的手。“你只要喝了我的血,就会好起来的。”梓梓双眸含泪哽咽的说。“你的血流进了也不会救好我的,西候毒术无人能解。”白月说。“即使我的血流干,我的肉吃没,我也要救好你。”梓梓说。本是报恩和照顾,却有了一段不平凡的故事。遇食人族血液倒流,遇到美女暗生醋意。爱他奉献了她的生命,只愿两人长长久久相随左右!
  • 我的青春我做主(保持学生良好心态的故事全集)

    我的青春我做主(保持学生良好心态的故事全集)

    走进如歌的生命,走过诗意的青春。曾几何时,我们叹息时光的飞逝,叹惋落日的凄美,却任凭美好从身边转瞬即逝。不是青春短暂、岁月苍白,而是我们不曾将它涂上丰富的色彩。何不于喧闹中体会宁静,于繁杂中感受简约,以平静的心情看待得失,以良好的心态面对功利,“不以物喜,不以己悲”才是人生之大境界。
  • 灵长的线

    灵长的线

    陶立山的各路妖精纷纷举办夜宴,因为听说失踪了二十来年的裁判回来了,太好了,那场“盛宴”可以继续了……
  • 幕学举要

    幕学举要

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 平安轶事:柔情小王爷

    平安轶事:柔情小王爷

    “不管你有意还是无意,你今日在众目睽睽之下接近了我,就已成为众矢之的。”他示意她往外看。“你不会对我怎么样的。”她抬起他的下颌,俯身吻住了他。他迟疑道:“你希望我娶你吗?”她反问:“你希望娶我吗?”“我不知道。”他托起她的脸,“看着你的眼睛就知道你很不诚实,也许你是真的在利用我,目的达到就会把我扔弃。”用一世柔情,换一生相伴。
  • 桃之夭夭,魔君大人不可怕

    桃之夭夭,魔君大人不可怕

    初遇时,她还是一株未能化作人形的小桃树,他却能随手就帮她挡过一道雷劫;再遇时,她已然成为一个桃花小仙,而他却坐上了那个令六界闻风丧胆的位置,可他转身居然就被一只兔子勾了魂儿去......